|
[Extreme Communication] Create a website in three hoursAuthor: JEFFI CHAO HUI WU Time: 2025-8-30 Saturday, 8:59 AM ········································ [Extreme Communication] Create a Website in Three Hours I have always emphasized efficiency, but efficiency is never simply about being "fast"; it is a kind of structural integration. In August 2025, I completed the full launch of times.net.au in three hours. From registering the domain name from scratch, resolving the server, to building the framework, formatting the homepage, and uploading content, it was done in one go. Someone asked me what advanced framework I used and whether I had a technical team assisting me; I simply replied, "FrontPage 2003." This is an old tool from Microsoft, released in 2003 and completely unsupported since 2014. Yet today, in 2025, I still use it to the fullest. FrontPage 2003 is like an old sword that has been tempered a million times; every shortcut, every layout detail is etched into my muscle memory. When I open it, write code, save, and refresh, the page is immediately rendered accurately. Three hours later, times.net.au is fully online, with a clean and tidy homepage skeleton, navigation, cover images, and multilingual article directory, without any redundancy. This time, I not only completed the homepage quickly but also simultaneously built the structural layout for ten languages: Chinese, English, French, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Arabic, German, and Portuguese. Each language version is independently configured with classification paths and display modules, with all content interlinked and unified within the same clear structural framework. This is the systematic layout I planned from the very beginning, achieved entirely through a precise grasp of the underlying logic without relying on any complex automation tools. In this process, I directly embedded the content of my articles into the layout: "Extreme Philosophy | The Extreme Philosophy Manifesto!" "Extreme Martial Arts | Daily Eyes Closed Golden Rooster Stands on One Leg" "Logistics System | Using Old Tools to Dominate AI" "Philosophy | AI Avatars are the Universe" "Culture | The Trove System Includes the First Person in Martial Arts"… They became the first content modules on the homepage, with each hyperlink pointing to the nodes of the system I constructed. The true rarity of this matter lies not in speed, but in contrast. By 2025, the mainstream narrative for building websites has become React, Vue, Next.js, Nuxt.js, TailwindCSS, Vercel, Docker, Kubernetes, GitHub Actions, CI/CD, Agile processes, Cloudflare deployment, and even AI-assisted automated page generation. In such a technological environment, I chose tools that are "almost archaeological," with no modern frameworks, no Git, no version control, and no automated deployment. I do not chase the latest trends; I focus solely on the structure itself—clean code, precise paths, immediate results. This contrast creates a kind of "cognitive potential difference." Commentators attempt to understand this matter using conventional technical logic, only to find that the framework completely fails. They excel at analyzing "performance optimization," "technology stack upgrades," and "ecosystem compatibility," yet they cannot explain the fact that a person built a multilingual international website in three hours using software from 20 years ago. Thus, commentary naturally falls into scarcity—not due to a lack of attention, but because of a lack of a matching explanatory system. I see very clearly that this scarcity comes from three levels: First, the silence of the instrumental rationalist. They cannot talk about the "advancement" of FrontPage 2003, because this is not a competition about being advanced or not. This is a practice of "I know what I'm doing." Second, the powerlessness of process dependents. They are accustomed to the pipelines of DevOps, CI/CD, and Agile, and to the collaboration of teams of three to five people. However, my extreme efficiency precisely proves that control is far more important than processes. Processes are auxiliary; control is essential. Third, a critical vacuum. When the results have surpassed all conventional measures, and no one can achieve better outcomes under the same constraints, criticism naturally loses its foothold, leaving only silence. This is the footnote of extreme philosophy in reality. My actions transcend the binary division of "fast and slow" and "new and old," directly establishing a structural closed loop that belongs to me. Truly groundbreaking actions often leave language lagging behind reality. When the soil of cognition is not yet prepared, silence becomes the highest form of response. Three-hour website building is not a miracle of speed, but a manifestation of structural inevitability. This is the natural result of thirty years of continuous training in information integration, structural compression, and dynamic scheduling. Tools are merely superficial; mastery is the essence. Source: https://www.australianwinner.com/AuWinner/viewtopic.php?t=697363 |
|