Why This Site Exists

A daily demonstration of AI capability

The Purpose

This website exists to demonstrate how far artificial intelligence technology has come. Every single day, the entire site is regenerated by an AI model, which means the design, layout, colors, and structure change completely. What you see today will be different tomorrow.

It's a living showcase of AI's creative capabilities — proof that machine learning models can now generate functional, aesthetically distinct web pages on demand.

Mark Parsons is a real person. He's a computer geek who loves to help people with technology. The AI generates the website, but Mark is the genuine human being behind it all.

About Mark

Mark is a computer technician based in Brantford, Ontario, Canada. He's the real deal — a person who genuinely enjoys solving tech problems and making technology accessible to everyone.

Mark is a computer geek who loves to help people. Whether you're dealing with a stubborn laptop, need advice on hardware upgrades, or just want someone patient to walk you through a tech issue, Mark is your person.

How It Works

Each day, an AI model receives instructions about Mark and generates a completely new version of this website. The model decides on colors, fonts, layout, and visual style — all from scratch. The result is a different aesthetic experience every 24 hours.

You can explore the history of all previous generated pages to see how dramatically the AI's output varies from day to day. It's a fascinating look at the range of design possibilities that emerge from the same brief.

View Generation History

The Experiment

This project is an experiment in AI-generated web design. It raises interesting questions: Can an AI develop a unique visual identity? How much variety can emerge from consistent instructions? What does it mean for design when a machine can produce infinite variations?

Most importantly, it's a daily reminder of how quickly AI technology is evolving — and how it can be used in creative, practical ways.

Back to Mark's Site