An Exhibit · Tong De Archives · July 2026

Instruments of
Infrastructure

A working history of how one temple built, lost, and rebuilt its own technology — from a locked sacred-song page in 2008 to a self-hosted stack in 2026.

聖歌庫 a locked song page · 2008
Tong De Radio a 24/7 station · 2026

The temple’s technology was built up quietly — by hand, over the better part of two decades, never with much of a team or a budget. And it does not start where most people think. It starts in 2008, with a website hand-hosted off a machine at home, meant to hold the temple’s sacred songs. That first site lapsed; the temple went quiet online for most of a decade; and then, from 2020 on, it was rebuilt — bigger, rented, then owned — into the stack it runs today: a self-hosted chat server, a fleet of published sites, a git-native translation pipeline, an AI directory assistant, and a radio station.

What follows is that record, reconstructed from receipts, registrar emails, four mailboxes, a decade of chat history, and the temple’s own file archive — then checked against memory and corrected where the two disagreed. The single thread that runs through all of it is the one you can hear in the very first artifact and the very last: own the thing yourself.

TDT · 2008–2011 Lapsed 2011

First Light

A self-hosted 聖歌庫 · the temple’s first website

On 24 May 2008, the temple's official shared Gmail was created and announced that same afternoon to the earliest circle: the Transmitting Teacher (點傳師), a 前賢, and 德恩壇. Within three weeks there was a website, hand-hosted off a home machine through a dynamic-DNS account, with Lunarpages as the registrar. On 16 June he soft-launched it and asked the Transmitting Teacher what he thought.

The Transmitting Teacher pushed back on privacy. The next day, its maker locked the whole site behind a password — and, in doing so, wrote down exactly what it was for:

“來當作聖歌庫的地點” — a place to serve as a sacred-song repository
The temple’s first mailbox, announced the day it was made · 2008-05-24
同德的信箱:道場官方 Gmail 帳號

(三週後 · 2008-06-15)
Your DynDNS Account "tongde" has been created.
two personal @tongde.org mailboxes now live  ·  signed by a 前賢
SOURCE — the temple’s official Gmail, its own earliest messages. The site left no trace in the Internet Archive because it was password-locked from day two — which is exactly why this chapter stayed invisible until the receipts surfaced.

The domain was renewed twice and then lapsed on 7 June 2011. The first era ended quietly; tongde.org would stay out of the temple’s hands for fourteen years — the effort was ahead of the support and momentum to sustain it, and there was, as yet, no pressing reason for the temple to be online.

Not just the website A Buffalo LinkStation Pro NAS was already running backups in 2008 too — its logs survive in Box, dated 200808… — the pre-Synology ancestor of the temple’s storage. Both the serving layer and the storage layer trace to that first year.
TDT · 2020

Relaunch

Chat before website · WordPress on rented cloud

The temple’s digital presence had effectively gone dark from mid-2015 — four silent years — and the revival, when it came, was pandemic-forced. The first move was an ad-hoc Zoom class on 30 March 2020 (“Dao Seminar this Saturday — online”), broadcast to some forty members. A Slack workspace followed that summer — the temple’s first real institutional collaboration platform, the backbone it would organize itself on for four years, until it deliberately moved off it to self-hosted Mattermost. Only in September 2020 did tongde.us get registered and a WordPress site go live on an AWS Lightsail instance in Ohio — a multisite install that would come back to bite the next migration. The coordination tools came first, out of necessity; the website caught up after.

RegistrarDomain.com (eNom)
HostAWS Lightsail · us-east-2
ChatSlack
FilesBox “Tong De Cloud”

By November the site was live under its real domain, Amazon SES was wired for mail, and a tutorial had been written for the members — “如何申請 tongde.us 帳戶.” The temple was back, this time on rented cloud instead of a machine at home.

TDT · 2020.12–present

The Deals Machine

A whole stack, on 501(c)(3) leverage · the status that cuts both ways

Almost none of this stack was bought at list price. Starting in December 2020, with a TechSoup account as the validating gatekeeper, the temple assembled its software on nonprofit terms. In a note to the team that month:

“Hx is applying for nonprofit certification with TechSoup… We will also be able to get GSuite for free.”

It mostly worked — Google Workspace, Microsoft, Adobe, Canva, Zoom, Box, and eventually TuneIn all came through. But one door didn’t open, and the reason it stayed shut turned out to matter more than any of the ones that opened:

Slack for Nonprofits · the denial · 2021-05-04
Unfortunately, your organization is categorized as a
religious organization, which aren't eligible for
Slack for Nonprofits.
SOURCE — Slack’s nonprofit-validation team (partnered with TechSoup). The temple’s “religious organization” status — the very thing that qualified it everywhere else — is what disqualified it here.

The same status is a key at some doors and a lock at others:

Google WS
free
Canva
free
TuneIn
free
Microsoft
approved
Adobe
approved
Box
approved
Zoom
approved (after appeal)
Slack
× denied
Approved — the door opened Denied — religious org, shut out

Hold onto the Slack bar. Three years later, it becomes an architecture.

TDT · 2023–2024

Own the Data

The year the temple stopped renting its chat and its website

First the website moved hosts. The 2020 WordPress site — that multisite install — was migrated to Hostinger in early 2023; Hostinger’s automation rejected it twice (“Website is based with WordPress multisite”) before it was finished by hand. AWS wasn’t torn down at the cutover, though — the Lightsail box was kept running as insurance, and only decommissioned on 16 February 2025, once its successors were solid.

Then the two big surfaces came home. In March 2024, the temple migrated off Slack to a self-hosted Mattermost server; that November, its public sites moved from WordPress to Ghost. The Mattermost move had a stated motive — and it points straight back at that Slack bar:

Slack data-export request, on the way out · 2024
… we do not qualify for your nonprofit discount, being
what would be classified as a "religious organization."
… this data export is our attempt to reclaim ownership
of all of our available data at Slack, and move it all to
a self-hosted instance of the open-source competitor
Mattermost, a project that I am coordinating.
SOURCE — the temple's @tongde.us mailbox, 2024. The one “no” didn’t just close a door — it forced the temple to own its chat outright.

The full hosting arc, end to end — the temple keeps climbing back toward running its own infrastructure, the same instinct as that first home-hosted site in 2008:

The founding runbook Much of this thinking was written down early. Administrative Protocols.docx (rev. 4 November 2021) is the temple’s first IT/ops runbook — the listserv-based architecture, receipt reconciliation, the itinerary workflow — still the best “why it’s built this way” artifact in the archive. Not every experiment stuck: Mastodon and Weblate were stood up and set aside — though YOURLS did stick, still running as the go.tongde.us shortener. The roads not taken are part of the record too.
TDT · 2022–2026

How a Class Gets Captured

Banking the raw material before the refinery existed

Everything downstream — the archive, the translations, the podcast, the radio — begins with capturing a class. That layer got serious hardware between 2022 and 2023, years before the temple had a pipeline sophisticated enough to do much with the recordings. The raw material was being banked before the refinery existed.

InstrumentArrivedWhat it does
Mevo Start 3-PackSep 2022three wireless cameras, multi-cam class recording
Meeting Owl 3Jan 2023360° camera at 德恩壇 (an NY unit was bought & returned)
Zoom → Box~Nov 2023auto-transfer recordings off Zoom into the archive (Zapier)
Mevo MulticamJun 2025live multi-cam switching moves behind a subscription
Zoom → Box (n8n)Apr 2026the recording pipeline migrates off Zapier to self-hosted
Into the pipeline For 訓文, a condenser microphone clipped to the 借竅 channeler feeds the transcription alongside the room’s Zoom audio — the exact point where a spoken teaching becomes the raw material for the whole distill → reader → podcast chain.
TDT · 2026–present On view now

Built With an AI

Claude Code · a pipeline, a reader, a directory bot — and a radio station

Since Claude Code arrived in February 2026, much of the temple’s technology is now built hand-in-hand with an AI: a research-grounded, git-native translation pipeline; a layer-toggle teachings reader with per-line reader flags and votes; a directory-quality workflow run by an on-server assistant; a self-hosted mail server; automations moving off Zapier onto n8n; and bridges wiring SMS and LINE into Mattermost.

ChatMattermost + @claude
WebMkDocs / MDX + Ghost
Source of truthgit
FilesBox + Synology + MDX

And on 2 July 2026 — the day this exhibit was compiled — a small approval closed an eighteen-year loop:

“You are eligible for free usage of TuneIn On Air.” — TuneIn, approving Tong De Radio, 2026-07-02

The temple’s first website, in 2008, was a locked page meant to hold sacred songs. Its newest service is Tong De Radio — a 24/7 station any member can now ask a smart speaker for by name. The 聖歌庫, rebuilt as broadcast. Full circle.

Everything running today · indexed by apps.tongde.us + it.tongde.us
PUBLISH    teachings · karaoke · books · en / zh (Ghost) · podcast · radio
COMMUNITY  Mattermost · LINE
DATA       Directory · Teachings DB · Classes · Itinerary  (Airtable)
EDITORIAL  Workbench · edit (HedgeDoc)
ADMIN      Google Workspace · Zoom · Canva · Microsoft 365
STORAGE    Box — Tong De Root
UTILITY    go (YOURLS shortener) · the apps. / it. launchpads themselves
SOURCE — the launchpad catalogs (launchpad/shared/*-catalog.js). Every service here traces to a dated milestone in the record; the full roster with first-live dates is in tech-history-timeline.md → The current stack.
The quiet contribution By 2026 all of the above is a genuine fleet — services spread across DigitalOcean, a Synology NAS, a Mac Studio, and an Ubuntu VM, tied together by Cloudflare Tunnels, at the end of a hosting arc that ran home machine (2008) → AWS Lightsail (2020) → Hostinger (2023) → this mix. The AI era’s least visible gift isn’t any single feature: it’s that navigating this accumulated complexity is now itself an AI-assisted task. Claude Code doesn’t just build the new pieces — it’s part of how the sprawl stays coherent and operable at all.
TDT · cross-cutting, all eras

The Pattern

What shows up in every era

Read across eighteen years, the same three moves keep recurring:

Own the data. Nearly every migration is the same instinct — stop renting, run it yourself. Asana → ClickUp, WordPress → Ghost, Slack → Mattermost, Zapier → n8n, Airtable → git. The home-hosted site of 2008 and the self-hosted fleet of 2026 are the same reflex, thirty-six domains and four hosting eras apart.

Religious-org status cuts both ways. The single best lens on the whole stack: a key at TechSoup, Google, Canva, and TuneIn — a lock at Slack, whose “no” is the documented reason the temple self-hosts its chat today. The eligibility rule didn’t only save money; in one case it decided an architecture.

Communication reaches across a border. Much of the community is in mainland China, so a quiet, sustained thread runs through the Mattermost years — renaming the team slug, migrating channels, verifying the server works from inside China without a VPN. The infrastructure is shaped by who it has to reach.

Honest about the edges This record is strong on domains, hosting, chat, publishing, deals, and the capture layer — and deliberately thin in a couple of places it names openly: the recurring technical hands — the Transmitting Teacher (點傳師) and several 前賢 — deserve a fuller telling that belongs to the temple's own voice, not to receipts; and a couple of small facts (why an NY camera was returned, how a 2025 YouTube stream was wired) remain open. A history honest about its own gaps is the only kind worth keeping.
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