On the internet, most personal websites fall into two broad categories.

One is the personal blog, a place to record life and thoughts.
The other is the product site, built to showcase and sell something specific.

MonadoCore doesn’t quite belong to either.

It is closer to a personal lab.

A place where I document experiments and ideas — especially those that sit somewhere between systems, markets, and creative work.

Here I record thoughts about these areas, along with small experiments that often begin as sudden ideas.


Why a “Lab”

I wouldn’t really call myself a programmer.

My academic background wasn’t in computer science or networking, so many ideas begin in a very incomplete form.

Sometimes they start as simple questions:

  • Today many platforms allow you to launch a polished website with just a few clicks. But what happens if you build everything yourself — the server, the infrastructure, the entire stack?
  • Can AI and modern tools help turn rough ideas into things that actually run?
  • Do technology, finance, and creative work share some underlying structure?

These questions don’t always have clear answers.

But experimentation itself is valuable.

That is why I prefer to think of this site as a lab, rather than a finished product.


Three Areas of Exploration

At the moment, MonadoCore focuses on three directions.


Systems

Infrastructure, tools, and technical experiments.

This includes servers, cloud services, development tools, and explorations into system design and technical structures.

Some posts document the actual building process — deploying websites, configuring services, or creating small utilities.

But these are not traditional tutorials.

In 2026, tutorials are something AI can already provide easily.

What interests me more is documenting the process of experimenting and thinking through systems.


Markets

Markets and finance — or more simply, money, and how to navigate the systems that shape our lives.

Investing is deeply counter-intuitive.

Thinking is painful and energy-consuming.
Markets are filled with noise: dramatic institutional narratives, emotionally-driven influencers, and constantly shifting stories.

For ordinary individuals with limited capital, the room for maneuver is small.

Often the market refuses to give satisfying answers.

Yet we still have to steer our small boat carefully, trying not to be swallowed by larger waves.

This section records notes about markets, macro environments, and long-term thinking.

Nothing here should be considered financial advice — only observations and reflections.


Worlds

Creation and worldbuilding.

Beyond technology and finance, I am also interested in creative work — world design, art, and ideas related to games.

In many ways, creation is also a form of system design.

The difference is that the system exists not in code, but in the imagination.


Structure of the Site

Currently the website is divided into several sections.

Blog

A place for longer thoughts, experiments, and reflections.

Tools

Small experimental utilities.

Many of them begin as spontaneous ideas — quick tests to see whether a concept is possible.

If a tool eventually becomes stable or commercially viable, it may move into its own independent project.

Projects

Completed or partially completed experiments.

This section works more like a portfolio, documenting what has been built and the context behind it.


What Comes Next

MonadoCore is still at a very early stage.

In the future, this space may include:

  • more technical experiments
  • small tools
  • long-term notes about markets and systems
  • creative projects and worldbuilding ideas

The goal is simple:

Build interesting things — and document the process.

And yes, if the name didn’t give it away —

I am a fan of the Xeno series.