01
Intake lane
Capture the source, status, scope, and unresolved questions before a public sentence is drafted.
Circuit method
The Publast method turns a fast publishing workflow into a visible circuit. It is intentionally compact: every release should name what came in, what was checked, what changed for the public version, and how a future reader or crawler can find the same path.

01
Capture the source, status, scope, and unresolved questions before a public sentence is drafted.
02
Compress the claim until it states only what the evidence can carry, then mark assumptions plainly.
03
Shape the note with a direct title, summary, date, author line, semantic article body, and structured data.
04
Expose the final route through canonical metadata, sitemap discovery, and stable visible passages.
The circuit is not a compliance checklist. It is a way to keep the pressure of publishing from flattening nuance. When the intake lane is weak, the article invents context. When the cipher lane is weak, the article overclaims. When the caster lane is weak, the article may be readable to a person but invisible to structured systems. When the beacon lane is weak, a good note disappears after release.
Publast.cc keeps those lanes close together. A compact page can still carry a full trace: clear headings, accurate dates, a human explanation, a machine-readable article object, and a canonical path that does not shift after the blast.