Mark is a real person.
Mark Parsons is a real human being — a computer technician living in Brantford, Ontario, Canada. He repairs computers, helps people navigate technology, and has been a self-described computer geek for most of his life.
He genuinely loves helping people with technology. No condescension, no impatience — just clear explanations and practical solutions. That's who he is and what he does.
- Real person. Real technician. Real Brantford, Ontario.
- Has run Linux since before most people knew what it was.
- Helps people with technology because he actually enjoys it.
- Yes, the dog-themed gaming usernames are real too.
What is this site, really?
This site exists to demonstrate how far AI technology has genuinely come. The entire page — layout, content, copy, CSS, and JavaScript — is regenerated fresh every single day by an AI model, with no human editing the output.
Every 24 hours, an automated process sends a prompt to an AI model. The model writes the complete HTML file from scratch. The result is deployed as the live website. That means every day the site may look and feel different — different design choices, different phrasing, different layout — while staying true to the facts about Mark.
How it works.
The process is straightforward. A brief describing Mark — his skills, personality, location, interests, and the facts that should appear on the page — is sent to the AI model each day. The model generates a complete, single-file HTML website. That file goes live.
No templates. No CMS. Just a prompt and an AI doing its best work.
# Send brief to google/gemini-3.5-flash
$ model="google/gemini-3.5-flash"
$ ./generate --model $model --brief mark.txt
✓ index.html generated (4,892 tokens)
✓ why.html generated (2,341 tokens)
$ ./deploy --target prod
✓ Deployed to Kansas City server
# See you tomorrow.
Why demonstrate AI capability?
Mark is a computer technician. Technology is his world. Watching what AI can do — not in a demo, not in a controlled showcase, but in a real daily deployment — is exactly the kind of experiment a computer geek runs.
A few years ago, asking an AI to produce a complete, visually distinct, functioning website every 24 hours would have been a bad joke. Today it works. That's worth showing people.
This site isn't trying to replace web designers. It's a demonstration that the tools have changed, and changed substantially. Mark thinks you should know about it.
See every version ever built.
Every daily generation is archived. You can browse the entire history of what the AI produced — every design, every layout variation, every iteration since the project started. It's a living record of the model's output over time.
View the full archive
Every previously generated version of this site, dated and preserved, at markparsons.com/history.