A real person. An AI experiment. A daily demonstration of how far technology has come.
← Back to Mark's SiteMark Parsons is a genuine human being who lives in Brantford, Ontario, Canada. He repairs computers, helps people navigate technology, and has strong opinions about homemade pizza and the Maple Leafs. He is not a bot, not a placeholder, and not a marketing construct.
Mark is, in his own words, a computer geek who genuinely loves to help people. That's not a tagline — it's just accurate. He gets actual satisfaction from explaining things clearly, solving tricky problems, and making technology less intimidating for people who didn't grow up taking apart hard drives for fun.
Mark agreed to let his personal website be the canvas for an ongoing AI experiment — because if there's one thing a computer technician appreciates, it's watching technology do something genuinely impressive (or occasionally absurd).
This site exists to demonstrate, in a very practical and concrete way, how far AI technology has come. Not through a whitepaper. Not through a conference talk. Through a real website, belonging to a real person, that gets entirely rebuilt by an AI every single day.
Every day, an AI model reads a set of instructions describing who Mark is, what he does, and what kind of page to build. It then writes the entire site from scratch — HTML, CSS, JavaScript, copy, layout, colour scheme, everything. No templates. No recycled code. A fresh take, every morning.
The result? You might visit on Monday and find a minimal, clean design with a warm colour palette. Come back Tuesday and the whole vibe might be different — a new layout, new copy angle, different personality. The facts about Mark stay consistent. The presentation doesn't.
Not long ago, building a website required knowing HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. You needed to understand layout, design principles, copywriting, colour theory, and how to make things work across different browsers and screen sizes. It took real skill and real time.
Today, an AI model can generate an entire, polished, working website in seconds — one that reflects a specific person's personality, follows design conventions, and works correctly in your browser without a single human touching the code.
The point of this project is not to show that AI is magic, or that humans are obsolete, or any of the breathless claims you see in headlines. The point is simpler: this is what the technology can actually do, right now, today. Judge for yourself whether that's impressive, concerning, interesting, or all three.
Mark's take: "It's a tool. A very good tool. Kind of like a really fast computer that also writes. I'm a computer technician. I appreciate good tools."
Every version of this site that the AI has ever generated is saved and publicly accessible. You can browse through the history to see how different each day's interpretation was — same person, same facts, wildly different presentations.
It's a living archive of what AI-generated web design looks like across hundreds of iterations. Some days the result is elegant. Some days it's playful. Some days it's... ambitious. All of them are real, unedited AI outputs.
Browse every previously generated version of this site — a growing archive of AI-created pages, one per day, going back to the beginning.
View Full HistoryThe history page is maintained separately and updated automatically each time a new version is generated. It's the most honest possible record of what this experiment produces — the good, the experimental, and the occasional surprising design choice.
Because Mark asked for it. Which is honestly the best reason.
Mark is a real computer technician in a real Canadian city, doing real work for real people. He's not a tech influencer. He's not trying to build a personal brand. He's someone who understands technology well enough to find this kind of experiment genuinely interesting — and confident enough in his own identity that he doesn't mind an AI reinterpreting his homepage every morning.
Brantford, Ontario is a city with a lot of history — hockey legends, Canadian firsts, and a community that appreciates things that actually work over things that merely sound impressive. That felt like the right home for a project that prioritizes substance over spectacle.
If you need a computer fixed in Brantford, or you just want to talk to a human being who genuinely understands technology and won't make you feel bad for asking basic questions, Mark is your person.