Zenix Philosophy
Zenix tries to follow the philosophies of Zen, Unix and Suckless. Zen Unix becomes Zenix
Zenix is currently in heavy refactoring and rearchitecturing mode. By importing proprietary code iI had written for multiple projects, I’m now stripping down everything to the bare essentials yet providing valuable functionality.
The Zenix Core: Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.
1. Zen (Mental Clarity)
Zen is the practice of stripping away the non-essential to achieve focus. In software, this means eliminating distraction. Zenix provides a clean, quiet sanctuary for your thoughts and digital presence. There are no pop-ups, no invasive analytics, and no artificial dopamine loops. It creates Tihnă—peace of mind—by giving your content space to breathe.
2. Unix (Architectural Elegance)
The Unix philosophy dictates that a system should be composed of small, sharp tools that do one thing exceptionally well and communicate via a universal interface. Zenix honors this by treating everything as a resource. Pages, structural templates, and executable scripts all live as uniform entries in a clean SQLite table, interacting through predictable, flat interfaces.
3. Suckless (Code Economy)
The Suckless philosophy is an active war against software bloat. I believe that intelligence is demonstrated by how much code you don’t write. Zenix avoids heavy container networks, sprawling dependency trees, and resource-gluttonous runtimes. It is written to be understood by a single human mind and executed efficiently on minimal hardware.
At the core Zenix is written in GOlang a compiled programming language, using sqlite as a database and it’s extensible with Zbor, a javascript like scripting language