COURTHOUSE.STREAM
FILED: MARCH 2, 2026 DOCKET NO. 2026-CS-00417
PROCEEDINGS

The following is a continuous digital record of proceedings conducted under the authority of courthouse.stream, a real-time transcription service operating in perpetual session. All statements rendered herein are generated, recorded, and archived simultaneously. The record is open. The court is in session.

This platform represents the intersection of judicial procedure and digital infrastructure -- a system designed to capture, preserve, and stream the written word with the precision and formality of courtroom stenography. Every character that appears on this page has been processed through the same rigorous protocols that govern the official record of legal proceedings.

The architecture of this system is intentionally austere. There are no decorative elements, no visual flourishes, no concessions to aesthetic trends. The design language draws directly from the formatting conventions of United States federal court transcripts: monospaced type, numbered lines, narrow columns, and the absolute primacy of text over imagery.

EXHIBIT A

EXHIBIT A: STATEMENT OF PURPOSE. courthouse.stream exists as a demonstration of procedural minimalism applied to web design. The platform channels the measured cadence of a court reporter transcribing testimony in real time -- the austere geometry of wood-paneled chambers and the relentless forward march of the typed record.

The system operates under a single governing principle: every element must serve the record. Typography is not decorative; it is evidentiary. Layout is not aesthetic; it is procedural. The narrow column, the line numbers, the section dividers -- each serves the same function it serves in an actual courtroom transcript. The document is the interface. The interface is the document.

Let the record reflect that this platform employs no photographs, no illustrations, no icons, and no decorative imagery of any kind. The visual identity is constructed entirely from typography and geometric elements rendered in CSS. A court transcript contains no images -- only words, numbers, and the geometry of the page. This principle is honored without exception. [see TESTIMONY]

TESTIMONY

Q: Can you describe for the record the technical infrastructure underlying this system?

A: The system is built on standard web technologies -- HTML for structure, CSS for presentation, and JavaScript for the real-time typing engine. The typing mechanism reveals content character by character at approximately 35 to 50 milliseconds per character, with natural variation to simulate human typing rhythm. Punctuation introduces additional pauses: periods receive 120 milliseconds, commas receive 60 milliseconds, and paragraph breaks receive 400 milliseconds.

Q: And the visual design -- what principles govern its construction?

A: The design is governed by what we call procedural minimalism. A single typeface -- IBM Plex Mono -- is used exclusively throughout the entire platform, at varying weights and sizes. The palette consists of exactly five colors: pure white for the background, near-black for primary text, medium gray for secondary elements, dark gray for dividers, and courthouse red for the cursor and active indicators. There are no gradients. No shadows. No transparency. The palette operates in flat, opaque planes -- ink on paper.

Q: Is there anything else you wish to add to the record?

A: Only that the record speaks for itself. The system is designed to be read, not navigated. Content is consumed in order, top to bottom, as a legal transcript is read. The only interactive elements are the anchor-link references within the text and the scroll itself. The court reporter's work is never finished -- the cursor continues to blink, the record remains open, and the proceedings continue. [see EXHIBIT B]

EXHIBIT B

EXHIBIT B: TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS. The transcript column is constrained to a maximum width of 60 characters, centered within the viewport. This proportion directly references the formatting of actual court transcripts, where the text block occupies approximately 40 to 50 percent of the page width. On mobile devices, the column expands to 90 percent of the viewport width while maintaining the same typographic rhythm.

Line numbers appear in the left gutter at 5-line intervals, rendered in medium gray via CSS counter-increment. Section dividers are styled as exhibit markers -- uppercase, letterspaced, and set in a smaller size than body text. The vertical rhythm follows a strict 1.5rem baseline grid: paragraphs are separated by 1.5rem, section gaps by 4.5rem.

The typing line -- a 1px horizontal rule in dark gray -- tracks the current position of the stenographer's cursor. Content above the line represents completed testimony at full opacity. The blinking cursor, rendered in courthouse red at 530ms intervals using a step-end animation, marks the active insertion point.

RECORD

Let the record reflect that this proceeding has been conducted in accordance with all applicable protocols. The transcript has been generated in real time, character by character, with no alterations, omissions, or embellishments. Every word that appears in this record was produced by the system exactly as presented.

The court notes for the record that the visual presentation of this transcript adheres to the standards established by the United States Federal Court Reporters Association: monospaced type, numbered lines, a single narrow column, and the use of section markers and exhibit labels for organizational clarity.

This proceeding is not adjourned. The cursor continues to blink. The record remains open. courthouse.stream operates in perpetual session -- a continuous, unbroken stream of the documented word, available to all who wish to read it.

END OF CURRENT PROCEEDINGS. THE COURT REMAINS IN SESSION.

RECORDING