--- layout: default title: "Version 1.0 Lookback" description: "A reflective look back at the work, growth, and milestones that led to the Version 1.0 release of the Sunil Abraham Project." image: /sunil/images/tsapvfinal.jpg categories: [Project pages, Versions] permalink: /versions/1.0/ created: 2025-12-31 ---
The Sunil Abraham Project (TSAP) was founded on 2 October 2025, marking the point at which earlier planning turned into a sustained public documentation effort with a clear archival intent.
From the outset, the project adopted a visible and disciplined release rhythm. Version updates were published every Sunday at 8:00 am IST, creating a steady public cadence that shaped how work was planned, reviewed, and recorded.
The early phase focused on laying down structural fundamentals. Built on GitHub Pages using Jekyll, attention was given to layouts, metadata, URLs, and category logic, ensuring that different forms of material could coexist cleanly and remain navigable as the site expanded.
Over the following weeks, the archive grew rapidly as publications, media articles, and references were located, verified, and prepared for publication. By the end of December 2025, the project had crossed 365 articles, reflecting the scale of material that had previously been dispersed across platforms.
As content accumulated, questions of coherence became central. Recurring subjects, long-running debates, and sustained engagements began to appear across multiple articles and media mentions.
To address this, clusters were introduced as a core organisational tool. Clusters bring together related material under a single navigable page, helping readers move across people, publications, and themes without flattening individual articles.
Each cluster functions as a small curated archive, offering background context and structured pathways through related content while preserving the independence of each page.
From the outset, the project has been shaped by a mobile-first and accessibility-friendly approach. Design and content decisions prioritise readability on mobile screens, clear navigation, and inclusive presentation, ensuring the site remains usable and welcoming across devices, contexts, and abilities.
Dedicated portals further deepened this approach. The A. M. A. Ayrookuzhiel Portal became an important milestone, bringing together biographical material, writings, archival references, and interpretive studies related to Athanasius Mathen Abraham Ayrookuzhiel.
Designed as a research-oriented space, the portal allows students, researchers, and family members to explore his life and work without navigating across scattered categories.
Toward the end of the Version 1.0 cycle, work began on the Artificial Intelligence Portal. This portal consolidates Sunil Abraham's engagement with artificial intelligence as a policy domain, regulatory challenge, and subject of public debate.
You may begin with a small selection of work that reflects the project's core themes, including the Surveillance Project, reflections on Shreya Singhal and Section 66A, analyses of digital infrastructure such as UPI and cyber sovereignty, policy critiques spanning AI governance and technology-led policymaking, as well as Students for Peace, which documents a peaceful demonstration by 5,000 students in Bangalore in 1993.
A comprehensive research space bringing together biographical material, writings, archival references, and interpretive studies. This portal serves students, researchers, and family members exploring the life and work of theologian Athanasius Mathen Abraham Ayrookuzhiel.
A dedicated space consolidating engagement with AI as a policy domain and regulatory challenge. The portal spans technical frameworks, ethical questions, governance models, and social implications with particular attention to privacy, surveillance, competition, and human rights.
Version 1.0 marks the point at which this structure feels stable enough to support the work ahead. The emphasis now shifts from rapid expansion to careful stewardship, stronger internal connections, and making the existing body of work easier to navigate and return to over time.