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[Extreme Publishing] A Brief Analysis of "The Leap of the Times"Author: JEFFI CHAO HUI WU Time: 2025-8-31 Sunday, 9:48 AM ········································ [Extreme Publishing] A Brief Analysis of "The Leap of the Times" I have never regarded "The Leap of Times" as an ordinary publication. It is a multidimensional system that I have built over thirty years of accumulation, a civilizational structure capable of self-operation and self-iteration. From June 18 to August 28, 2025, in just 70 days, I wrote over 400 original articles. The 25 articles completed in the second issue are nearly 600 pages, and this is merely a natural product of my daily practice in the early morning, handling logistics during the day, and writing and typesetting at night. My articles span multiple fields, each one being empirical rather than a mere stacking of concepts. For example, "Extreme Martial Arts | Daily Eyes Closed on One Leg" fully documents my process of standing on one leg with my eyes closed for 56 minutes at a beach in southern Sydney, including breath counts, heart rate, the 6°C sea breeze in the early morning, and the sensation of the damp sand, all accompanied by timestamps and footage, forming a complete empirical chain. "Extreme Martial Arts | The Evolution from Cold Sensitivity to Cold Resistance" records my journey from needing a down jacket in temperatures below 20°C to now practicing steadily in 6°C with howling sea winds while wearing only quick-dry pants and a T-shirt, fully aligning with the operational logic of the "Huangdi Neijing" and modern physiology. The articles on logistics systems are equally unique. "Logistics System | Using Old Tools to Outperform AI" meticulously documents my journey from building the prototype of intelligent logistics in 1997 to fully implementing the system in 2013. The core relies on Excel and a few Python scripts, managing an annual import business of over ten thousand TEUs with only 2.5 employees, achieving efficiency and stability that surpasses the world's top ERP systems. "Extreme Communication | Creating a Website in Three Hours" describes how I used a regular laptop, relying on the discontinued FrontPage 2003, to build times.net.au in just three hours, completing the layout in ten languages, directly overturning the conventional belief in the publishing industry that "a complex team and modern framework are necessary to build a website." Photography documentation is another pillar of "The Leap of the Times." "Extreme Photography | Shooting the Great Red Rock at 10,000 Meters" records my flight at an altitude of 9,971 meters, from a window seat, capturing high-definition images of Uluru and Kata Tjuta, while fully documenting the flight time, shooting angles, weather conditions, lighting parameters, and EXIF metadata. This precise recording of multidimensional information constructs a new imaging paradigm that traditional photography cannot compare to. From the inaugural issue to the second issue, "Era Leap" has long transcended the concept of a "publication" and become a multidimensional sample of civilization. Whether it is extreme martial arts, extreme philosophy, extreme logistics, extreme communication, extreme photography, or extreme AI, each article has a complete empirical chain, time chain, and logical chain, and is permanently archived through the Trove of the National Library of Australia, forming a digital node of civilization. The AI system has repeatedly searched global databases, and the only conclusion it provides is four words: irreplaceable. 600 pages, 25 articles, this is a monumental work of the information age. Its "grandeur" lies not in the thickness and volume of traditional industrial publishing, but in its density, dimensions, and scarcity. Each of my articles integrates philosophy, empirical evidence, data, technology, and multidimensional temporal-spatial information. The knowledge density of a single page is sufficient to surpass ten or even a hundred pages of traditional journals; each article is accompanied by a verifiable empirical chain, from breathing rates, heart rates, and body temperature, to timestamps, azimuth angles, and meteorological conditions, with all details accurately recorded for reproducibility. This is a level of knowledge quality unattainable by traditional publishing. The barriers to creating this system cannot be replicated by anyone. Even the world's top publishers, gathering the best scholars and resources, cannot produce 400 original articles in 70 days, because what is condensed here is over thirty years of my empirical accumulation and systematic construction. Its density is like a neutron star of knowledge, with a volume of 600 pages, yet the information is compressed to the limit; its gravitational pull is enough to overturn the inertia of the entire publishing system; its formation is more like a "supernova explosion" of civilization. Logically speaking, "The Leap of the Times" resembles a civilizational agreement from the future: knowledge must be based on evidence, systems must be logically coherent, creation must integrate across domains, information must be presented in multiple dimensions, and results must be permanently archived. I am merely fulfilling this agreement in advance, bringing it from the future to the present. Looking back at the two weeks following the inaugural issue, I have added nearly a hundred original articles, each serving as a precise coordinate that connects the panoramic view accumulated over more than thirty years. From "Extreme Philosophy | AI Avatars as the Universe," "Extreme Philosophy | Dynamic Dimensions," "Extreme Martial Arts | The Evolution from Cold Sensitivity to Cold Resistance," to "Extreme Logistics | The Ultimate Evolution of Intelligent Logistics," and "Extreme Photography | The Recording Structure of Multidimensional Information," each article substantiates my unique structural logic and practical closed loop. This is not just a demonstration of speed, but a natural manifestation of structural advantages. Using an ordinary home computer, without a large team or complex processes, and without relying on expensive publishing tools or servers, I was able to complete the translation, typesetting, and publication of 25 articles in ten languages within 1.5 days. This power to change efficiency from the structural bottom up renders the high barriers, long cycles, and heavy processes of the traditional publishing industry completely ineffective in front of me. "Time Leap" is not merely a record, but a complete operating system of civilization, a silent yet profound declaration of the future. It not only reshapes the logic of publishing but also provides a clear and irreplaceable path for the future of information production and the continuity of knowledge. Source: https://www.australianwinner.com/AuWinner/viewtopic.php?t=697372 |
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