When I brought TechInform back, I know the expectation probably wasn’t, “Cool, now go launch another website.” So yes, on paper, announcing a sister site right now might sound a little chaotic. Fair question. But this actually isn’t me taking time away from TechInform. It’s kind of the opposite.
I’ve been into the paranormal for basically my whole life. UFOs, strange sightings, unexplained stories — that world has always fascinated me. The problem was never interest. It was figuring out what to actually do with that interest. For years, I had the idea floating around in my head, but no real path to turn it into something solid.
That changed over the last several months while I was designing a brand-new backend for TechInform. Somewhere in the middle of building and refining all of that, it clicked: I already had the foundation I needed. Instead of starting from scratch, I could take the work I’d done for TechInform and use it to launch something new.
That something is UFOInform.us.
What UFOInform.us Actually Is
UFOInform.us is TechInform’s new sister site, built for UFOs, the paranormal, and unexplained-topic coverage. It’s a separate site with its own focus, but it comes from the same mindset that brought TechInform back in the first place: build something clean, useful, and actually fun to run.
If you visit the site, you’ll probably notice right away that it looks a lot like TechInform. That is absolutely on purpose. It’s not an accident. It’s the result of building a backend and site structure flexible enough to support more than one publication without reinventing the wheel every single time.
And honestly, that’s the part I’m most excited about.
From Months of Work to a 15-Minute Launch
The heavy lifting happened before UFOInform.us even existed.
I spent the last several months building out TechInform’s new backend platform, and that work paid off in a huge way. Once the core system was ready, getting UFOInform up and running took me about 15 minutes. After that, I spent maybe another hour polishing things up and making it feel right.
That’s wild to me, because if I had started from the beginning, this probably would have turned into a months-long project. Instead, the platform did exactly what I hoped it would do: it made a new idea actually possible.
That’s the dream, honestly. Not just building one site, but building something strong enough underneath that it can support more than one vision.
What the Goal Is for UFOInform.us
The goal for UFOInform.us is pretty simple: create a dedicated home for UFOs, paranormal topics, unexplained events, and the kind of weird stories that have interested me for years.
I don’t want it to feel like a random side project I forget about in two weeks. I want it to be a real publication with the same care, structure, and attention I’m putting into TechInform. The topic is different, sure, but the mission is familiar: make it approachable, make it interesting, and build something worth visiting.
There’s also a personal side to this. This site exists because I finally had a way to make an old idea real. That’s a pretty cool thing to be able to say.
What This Means for TechInform
Let me be clear: UFOInform.us does not change anything here in a bad way. This is not me stepping away from TechInform or shifting focus away from what I’ve been rebuilding.
If anything, it should only make things better.
Because both TechInform and UFOInform.us are built on the same backend platform, every improvement I make to that system can benefit both sites. That means better tools, better flexibility, and a stronger foundation overall. So instead of taking away from TechInform, UFOInform.us actually helps prove that the platform behind it is working exactly the way I hoped it would.
That’s a win for both sites.
What It’s Like to Build on This New Platform
From my side, this has been one of the most encouraging parts of the TechInform rebuild so far.
Instead of feeling like I’m constantly patching things together, I finally have a foundation that makes new ideas easier to try. UFOInform.us is the first real proof of that. It came together fast, it looks the way I wanted it to, and it showed me that all those months of backend work weren’t just theoretical improvements.
It also makes me more confident about where TechInform goes next. Every time I improve the shared platform, both sites can get better. That means better tools, better workflow, and a smoother experience overall without needing to rebuild everything from scratch each time I want to do something new.
There will still be things to tweak, of course. There always are. But this feels less like “launching a second site and hoping for the best” and more like opening the next door with a system that’s actually ready for it.
Trevor Score
Trevor Score: 9/10 — A longtime idea finally became real, and the backend made it way easier than it had any right to be.
This isn’t a formal review — it’s just how I felt using this thing. A gut-check from someone who actually used it.
The reason it’s not a full 10 is simple: any new launch comes with little adjustments, polishing, and lessons you only learn once it’s live. But as a proof point for the platform and a personal milestone, this one feels big.
Final Verdict
UFOInform.us is officially here, and I’m genuinely excited about what it represents.
Yes, it’s a new site. Yes, it covers a completely different topic. But no, it does not mean TechInform is getting pushed aside. If anything, it means the work going into TechInform is becoming even more valuable. The backend platform is now doing exactly what I hoped it would do: making growth easier, faster, and better across multiple sites.
So TechInform stays TechInform. UFOInform gets room to become its own thing. And as I keep expanding the platform behind both of them, that should only make everything stronger.
We’re not drifting away from TechInform — we’re building something bigger underneath it. And honestly, that’s a lot more fun than starting from the beginning every single time.