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How a blog-first media project got a clearer web framework

Pooria Arab2 min read

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Mr. Noon Media homepage with a blog introduction and anime-style image | Solo AI website creator

Mr. Noon Media started with a simple center of gravity: a blog. Negs, the founder, also creates websites for others, so the site needed to work both as a personal publishing home and as a public reference point.

The immediate problem was small but practical. Negs wanted a better way to verify and connect a Mastodon profile while giving the project a more organized web presence.

A better starting point

Solo gave the project a framework in one evening. Instead of starting with a blank page, Negs had a structure to edit and shape around the blog.

That mattered because Mr. Noon Media did not need a heavy website project. It needed a page that could hold the blog identity, make links easier to trust, and leave room for the founder to keep experimenting.

Time saved for the next idea

Negs reported saving time and money. For a blog-first project, that is the practical win. Less setup work means more room to publish, adjust the site, and try new ideas.

The website gives Mr. Noon Media a clearer place to point people, whether they arrive from social links, a profile page, or a future web project.

Building dreams with Solo is easy!

The Mastodon profile issue is a good example of why small sites matter. A creator may not need a large marketing system, but they still need a reliable place where identity, links, and current work can be checked. A website gives those pieces a home that is easier to share than a collection of separate profiles.

Mr. Noon Media can keep the site lightweight while the blog grows. If Negs adds more web projects later, the site can point to those too. The useful part is that the structure is already there, so the next update starts from an organized page instead of a blank screen.

Small projects still need structure

A blog-centered project can look simple from the outside, but the structure still matters. Visitors need to know where to read, which links are current, and whether the profile they found belongs to the same person or project.

Solo helped Mr. Noon Media put those pieces into a single page that can change as the project changes. That is the useful part for a creator who is still experimenting.

See the live website at Mr. Noon Media.

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