About isHistory

A curated digital archive dedicated to preserving the artifacts, rare codebases, obscure architectures, and human stories that shaped our technological landscape — from the earliest computing machines to the AI systems of today.

Why This Archive Exists

Technology moves fast. Innovations that once seemed revolutionary are quickly forgotten, their source code lost to defunct repositories, their architects fading into obscurity, and their lessons buried under layers of abstraction. isHistory was founded to arrest that decay — to trace, index, and safeguard the blueprints of the web and computing at large.

We believe that understanding where technology came from is essential to understanding where it is going. Every framework, every algorithm, every paradigm shift has a lineage — a chain of decisions, constraints, accidents, and insights that led to the tools we now take for granted. isHistory documents those chains, one chapter at a time.

This is not a news site. It is not a tutorial repository. It is an archive — a place where deep, carefully researched narratives live alongside the primary sources and code artifacts they describe. Each series is designed to stand the test of time, offering readers an authoritative reference they can return to years from now.

75 Planned Articles
46 Published Chapters
1 Active Series
600,000 Target Word Count

How We Build

Depth Over Speed

Each article is approximately 8,000 words of narrative, immersive, story-driven history. We do not chase recency — we chase understanding. A chapter about the Dartmouth Conference takes as long as it needs to take, because getting it right matters more than getting it first.

Primary Sources First

Every claim is traced back to its source — original papers, interviews, court transcripts, repository commits, and contemporaneous accounts. We do not rely on secondary summaries or Wikipedia chains. When a source is ambiguous, we say so. When a story has competing narratives, we present all of them.

Series Architecture

Content is organized into series — each a self-contained arc covering a major technology domain. Within each series, multiple tracks run in parallel (articles, profiles, events), creating a layered reading experience. You can follow one track linearly or cross-reference between them for a multi-dimensional understanding.

Open & Accessible

All content is published under an open license. No paywalls, no sign-ups, no tracking. The archive is built with web standards, self-hosted fonts for privacy, and structured data (JSON-LD, RSS, llms.txt) so that both humans and AI agents can discover and use the content. Built with Astro for speed, served from Cloudflare's edge.

Ishaan

Founder & Editor

Ishaan is the creator and curator of the isHistory digital archive. With a background in web development and a deep fascination for the history of technology, he launched this project to ensure that the engineering stories behind the tools we use every day are not lost to time. He researches, writes, and edits every chapter in the archive, aiming to make complex technical history accessible to a general audience without sacrificing accuracy or depth.

How It's Built

The archive is engineered for performance, privacy, and longevity. Every technical decision is made with the understanding that this content must remain accessible for decades, not just the current release cycle.

Astro 6 Static-first framework — zero client JS by default, island architecture for interactivity
Cloudflare Pages Edge deployment with automatic SSL, DDoS protection, and global CDN distribution
Tailwind CSS 4 Utility-first styling with CSS variable theming for light/dark mode and palette switching
Pagefind Static search index — fully client-side, no server queries, works offline
Sveltia CMS Git-based content management — write in Markdown, commit via the browser
JSON-LD + llms.txt Structured data for search engines and AI agents — every page is machine-readable

Ready to Explore?

Dive into the archive and discover the engineering stories behind the technology that shapes our world.