For Future Readers

Author: Dexin Kong
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0008-3831-5725
Structured and refined with assistance from ChatGPT
AI Automatic Translation (Unreviewed)


As XVort gradually grew, it slowly began to develop its own underlying tone.

It was neither a traditional technology project nor a conventional theoretical framework.

Much of the time, XVort felt more like an ongoing attempt to record subtle abnormalities that emerge after long periods of operation — those faint senses of “wrongness” that are often difficult to describe at first.


At the beginning, the author would instinctively try to explain these phenomena.

But over time, another realization slowly emerged:

some things, once explained too quickly, begin to drift further away from reality itself.

So the author became quieter, and continued observing with his eyes instead.

Some problems had no answers.

Some phenomena could not be stably defined.

Some forms of “wrongness” could not even be accurately described in words.

Yet they continued to exist.


Small things that seemed insignificant.

Details that could never be fully explained.

Moments filled only with a vague sense of “wrongness,” but no conclusion.

They were all tiny traces of texture left behind by reality itself.

There was no urgency to reach conclusions, nor any urgency to provide answers.

Whether a system can still sense that “wrongness” may itself be deeply important.


Perhaps many years from now, most of today’s technologies will already be obsolete.

But these fragments of “texture” may still remain.

And perhaps, by then, the long-term readers of these materials will no longer be only humans in today’s sense.

Yet those traces may still be worth preserving.


Note:
This project is an ongoing independent research effort developed in spare time.
Because of limited time and maintenance capacity,
English documents may contain translation inaccuracies or semantic deviations from the original Chinese texts.
The Chinese version remains the primary reference whenever ambiguity exists.