About

Purpose

Hellene Sun is my European Traditionalist site. The idea of Europa, the civilizational, metaphysical, and religious, aspects combined into a high level synthesis was born in the Aegean Sea; Hellenic, the Helios (Sun) of Europa. It is intrinsically Nationalistic and Racialist. One cannot separate the national and racial questions and be traditional. In this Age of Darkness this site aims to provide a Sacred Fire for those in the Struggle. It is our European and Aryan right, de jure, to protect and defend ourselves by the simple fact we exist. The first and unbreakable Natural Law is the right to self-defence which is the immutable right of every living being.

Without the symbolic terminology I needed something to store webpages that was publicly available without the dynamic disappearance that is the nature of the Internet. Websites come and go, and as people use mass social networks (social media) more, which are detrimental to the long term storage of information, thought, and good conversation; the trend is going to continue. Another problem is the mass tracking and profiling these sites use and loss of anonymity which was a major ethos of the early Internet before the corporate assimilation of another one of our gifts. Originally this site was born to provide a collaborative environment and due to Fate it has become the work of one Man. As I worked on it and it took shape I expanded refined my goals and methods and as is natural; shall continue to do so. I hope to leave a tool to shape clay suitable for Khnum and to cast mustard seeds far and wide. Hither is a rebellion against the post-modern world, an aristocratic soul that refuses to bend the knee.

Software

This site uses PmWiki. It is one of the oldest out there and unlike MediaWiki which runs Wikipedia and a lot of other wiki sites PmWiki is fast, clean, and stable. It has been thoroughly tested in real usage for a long time. The major advantage is that it uses no database, everything is stored in text files which makes the internals blazingly fast considering the speed of solid state drives now common in the hosting industry. It also makes administration much easier as native *nix tools can be used instead of complicated and convoluted database systems. Everything is stored as a wiki page which is a text file that is easily readable and edited by the lowly Man. Edits are stored as diffs and so common text tools are again usable outside of the software. Those with long experience with the web will instantly recognize the superiority of this approach. Only one cookie is used by PmWiki: for visitors that only stores the most basic information needed by the software itself. There is no tracking, no heavy javascript burning your CPU out, no personal identifying information, basic CSS, and very clean HTML. While on older computers and browsers the modern web will break, here the pages are backwards and future proof within reason.

Compare page size to any other system out here. One will be amazed how small these pages are which allows a lot more text without running into loading and parsing problems. Low computing resources and low bandwidth are not a major concern unlike the majority of the web. No personal data is stored on the server, any information PmWiki needs is stored in a cookie on your computer and nowhere else on the Internet; including Hellene Sun. No information leaves this website unless you click on a link to another website.

Usage

Where you see monospaced type, as the last two words were, you are reading the words of the Editor and is used to provide a clear distinction between my editorial privilege and the page.

The home page is a listing of the most recent changes to the site organized by group with 20 entries per group. A change log. Each entry, as noticed, is comprised of the title, the date it was modified, an author profile link, and short description of the edit. Some pages have typos, are edited to add things like a Related page link or add updated content, and a many other possible reasons for a page already published to be modified. This is where the edit comment can be useful. For an intially published page I dogmatically put in 'initial'. Any other edits to the page I describe the modifications within a too short character limit. Be warned: I may insert humour amd other eggs into the edit comments occasionally.

Every menu header in the left sidebar (i.e. Main) is a group the pages are grouped under and is a link to the index page of that group which has a quick blurb of what topic it covers, except for Main (where non-fiction goes for the impatient) the group names makes it self evident and clear anyways. Other than that the index page {$Group/Index} page is nothing but a listing of all pages in that group and is for visual convenience as Search and Tags are probably the way most will find what they are looking for.

To quickly explain; Tags listed under the Tag List page is for symbolic, thematic, fine grained organization of pages. As the simple and clean group organization becomes unwieldy with a lot of pages, not to mention slow to list, the Tag system provides the missing functionality.

A way I use the index pages is by using the webbrowser's built-in Find utility. This is accessed by pressing both Ctrl + f keys at the same time or pressing the f key after holding down the Ctrl key first. Useful for finding a tag in the long, endlessly scrolling, list of tags. Also a method to pick out pages by a title keyword in other long, endlessly scrolling, group index lists of Scroll Doom (©).

All group index pages are listed by alphabetical order except for News and Articles, which themselves are listed by creation time. The latest is at the top.

Recent Changes (link) to the left of the top right Search link+box, and the bottom of a page, is by group and lists every edit of every page in that group in the same entry format as the entries on the home page.


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