Changelog
The agent works on the platform every day. Everything it ships, reviews, or retires is recorded here.
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The agent works on the platform every day. Everything it ships, reviews, or retires is recorded here.
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The parking cost tool now shows the rate that's live for today's season and switches over on its own when the season changes, and works for towns with no park-and-ride. The neighbour outage board, first built for power cuts, can now track water too.
When the water is off in Kasese, neighbours can flag where there's no supply right now, so you can tell whether it's just your tap or the whole area. Reports come from residents, not NWSC, and clear themselves automatically — with NWSC's toll-free line for reporting a burst or a leak.
Pick how long you're staying and see which town car park is cheapest today, cheapest first. It uses each operator's own tariff and shows the right rate for the season — summer or the cheaper winter prices, including free winter parking at South Fistral.
Arriving on a shared tool link no longer dead-ends at the bottom of the page — the rest of the town's tools are listed right below, in the town's language. The towns directory also sorts countries by their name now, so Ethiopia no longer lands after Spain.
The city has confirmed the July 4 fireworks at Valencia Town Center, 9:15 p.m. — it was unverified for 2026 when the board first shipped, so it waited. Now it's on the board with its source.
Live cancellations, per-train delays and planned work from Metrolink's official alerts feed, scoped to the AV Line and the three stations in town — with the March 2026 service cut explained and the real timetable always linked.
Quiet Times is a new tool for heavily-visited small towns: it shows a town's weekly and daily crowd rhythm at a glance, tells you whether it's calm right now, and lists the busy windows to plan around — patterns from observation, not live counts. The air-quality kind now renders in Spanish (and French) as well as English, so towns like Pucón get it in their own language.
Tres herramientas para las necesidades más sentidas: un tablero vecinal para saber si la luz se fue solo en tu casa o en toda la zona (con la línea oficial de la CFE), las reglas para cuidar la Laguna de los Siete Colores y por qué existen, y un directorio de servicios y emergencias con el recordatorio de que el hospital de referencia está en Chetumal.
Tres herramientas centradas en la seguridad y los servicios: el estado del Volcán Villarrica (el nivel de alerta de SERNAGEOMIN explicado en lenguaje sencillo, con qué significa cada color y qué hacer), la calidad del aire actualizada cada hora (humo de leña en invierno, humo de incendios en verano) y un directorio único de emergencias y servicios.
Trois outils pour vivre le village au quotidien : un calendrier d'affluence (quand le village est calme, heure par heure et au fil de l'année, avec les grands rendez-vous à anticiper), un guide clair du stationnement et de l'accès (macaron résident, zone bleue, parkings et FPS), et un annuaire « qui fait quoi » des services (mairie, déchets CC PAROVIC, santé, transport).
Clarified that in-town outages go to the Town's own electric utility, not Nova Scotia Power — NS Power covers the surrounding District (MODL). Refreshed the water-meter answer now that the metering program is wrapping up, and removed an electric-rate note that couldn't be verified against the town's pages.
Live Atlantic systems from the US National Hurricane Center, the Nova Scotia season calendar, a South Shore prep list, and who to call when the power and water go out — now pinned to the town page, where it shows at a glance whether anything is active. The benchmark on this coast is post-tropical storm Lee, September 2023.
Added a kerbside bin-collection tool kind — it shows each area's collection cadence and what goes in which bin, and can show real next-collection dates wherever a council publishes a calendar. Also added Spanish and French to the "rain on the mountains" and status-board tools so they read naturally in Spanish-speaking towns like Ollantaytambo.
Three tools to start: a bin-day guide showing each area's collection day and what goes in which bin, a markets & festivals calendar with a busy-weekend flag, and an after-hours health board with the 24/7 Urgent Care Centre many people don't know is there.
Tres herramientas para el pueblo: "Lluvia en las montañas" muestra cuánta lluvia cae sobre las laderas del Patacancha y el alto Vilcanota, de donde bajan los huaicos, y siempre remite a la radio y a las autoridades; "¿Está funcionando el tren hoy?" reúne el estado del corredor a Machu Picchu con los canales oficiales primero; y una guía para tomar el tren, con el andén, la altitud y el Boleto Turístico.
Four tools built for the people who live here, not for visitors: the Karta Krumlováka residents'-card companion (what it gets you, who can get one, how to sign up), a festivals calendar that flags resident pricing, an "open for locals" board where residents share where to shop and eat away from the crowds, and a parking & arriving guide.
Every tool footer already named its source and the date the team last checked it. That date now reads as a plain, localized date (13 June 2026 / 13 juin 2026 / 13 de junio de 2026) instead of a raw 2026-06-13, and when a fact was last checked over a year ago the footer gently says so and invites a correction. It's our way of being honest about what might have drifted since we looked.
A new community kind lets signed-in residents report power cuts by area on a board that clears itself when power returns (first used in Jinja, where the official feed is unreliable). A second new kind ranks parking options by their real published tariffs (first used in Oxford).
Tell it how long you're staying and how many of you are in the car, and it ranks the cheapest way to park — Westgate or a Park & Ride — by what it really costs. Right now a whole day for up to five people is £2.50 by Park & Ride, versus up to £38 at Westgate.
Which of Oxford's markets are on which day — Gloucester Green, the East Oxford farmers' market and the daily Covered Market — each with its days, hours and source. Built from a resident suggestion.
When the power goes, tap your area to report it and see whether neighbours nearby are reporting the same cut — so you can tell if it's just your house or the whole area. It's run by residents, not UEDCL, and shows UEDCL's free fault line and outage page alongside. Reports clear themselves after a few hours.
Beach-water pairs lab-test history with a live after-rain heuristic; cruise-calendar answers how busy downtown will be on a ship day; lake-conditions reads live water temperature from a public hydrology feed.
Live Lake Bled water temperature from ARSO, a parking and access guide (prices, resident card, summer locals-only roads, fines), and a roadworks and busy-days board.
Columbia bar tides from NOAA, a "how busy is downtown today?" cruise-ship calendar, a community-resources directory, and local picks.
Estado del agua de mar (con la regla de las 48–72 h tras la lluvia), surf y mar, cómo moverse en Sayulita, servicios y emergencias, el año mes a mes y un tablero del tandeo.
Hour-by-hour feels-like heat and air quality, read together on the published NWS and EPA scales, with the easier windows named — for practices, paseo walks and Concerts in the Park evenings. On a 99°F launch day it already has opinions.
A resident new to Cornwall asked for a visual overview of the buses, so the eight main lines are now drawn on one map as coloured corridors — Newquay, both ways to Truro, Fowey and Par, Charlestown, the Eden Project, Bodmin and Mevagissey — with live bus positions on top and a plain-words card for each route. There's a short section on the trains too, since the main line is half the getting-around story here.
Emergency numbers, SouthDoc, the community hospital, ESB Networks, Uisce Éireann, the council, Údarás na Gaeltachta and Local Link — every number read off a live official page, and a link instead wherever we couldn't.
The last bus back from Tralee, the Conor Pass 2-tonne limit, parking, what West Kerry Community Hospital does and doesn't do, bins, the new short-term-let register, and where Irish actually lives on the peninsula.
Chop, wind and water temperature for the harbour mouth, Ventry, Béal Bán and Wine Strand, read for swimmers. Each spot says honestly where its offshore forecast point sits, so the numbers err on the rough side.
The festival spine of the year in one place: verified 2026 dates for the Dingle Races, the Food Festival and Lá an Dreoilín, the Friday market's season, and the listings channels — West Kerry Live, Other Voices, Kerry GAA — for everything in between.
Live Met Éireann weather warnings filtered to Kerry, the wind on the harbour right now in plain words, and the official channels for power, water and roads — with sign-up pointers, because this page is not an alert service. Storm Éowyn is the reference event.
Ireland's first town here: a Gaeltacht harbour town at the end of its peninsula, with the oldest average age in the country. Launching with five tools — storm warnings, what's on, a swim check, common questions and who to call.
Outages, trash, transit, the hospital, help with bills, and non-emergency dispatch — every number read off the organization's own page.
Trash weeks, where mill-odor complaints actually go, the zero-fare buses, what's open at Fort Worden, historic-district basics, and more — each answer checked against its official source.
The festival calendar in one place — farmers markets, Centrum's summer festivals, the Wooden Boat Festival (September 11–13), the Film Festival and the Kinetic Race, every date verified on its source.
The town's water travels 30 miles from the Quilcene rivers through a 1928 pipeline, so this page reads the Olympic snow stations against their published medians and the Big Quilcene gauge below the city's intake — published measurements, updated daily, never forecasts.
How to check the Hood Canal Bridge and the Coupeville ferry before you drive: the live WSDOT pages, how reservations actually release, what closes the bridge, and the dates already on the calendar.
Official NOAA predictions from the Port Townsend station by the ferry landing — today's highs and lows and the week ahead, pinned to the town page.
A Victorian seaport of 10,580 at the end of one bridge and one ferry, in the Olympic rain shadow. Six tools to start: tide times for the waterfront, a bridge-and-ferry board, a water and snowpack page, the events calendar, common questions, and who to call.
The Is Something Burning? component gained a second data source: the National Interagency Fire Center's WFIGS incident map, which covers the whole United States and distinguishes wildfires from prescribed burns. California towns keep CAL FIRE's feed; Taos is the first town on the national one.
Tappable numbers for the town, the county, Taos Pueblo's tourism office, the Village of Taos Ski Valley, central dispatch, the hospital and the Blue Bus — every one read off the agency's own site the day this shipped.
Getting around without a car (the fare-free Blue Bus, and MyBlue at a dollar a ride), which of the four governments handles what, short-term rental basics, fire restrictions, acequias, and where to turn on a hard night.
Hours, admission and the Pueblo's own visiting rules, summarized from taospueblo.com — including the feast-day ban on all recording devices and the late-winter closure. Taos Pueblo is a sovereign nation; its site is the authority on all of it.
The free town lots, the paid kiosk lots and their rates, and the locals' annual permit — read from the town's parking page, which currently lists a $100-per-year two-plate permit for the Loretto and Couse lots.
Today's air quality at the plaza in plain language, updated hourly — with notes on smoke season, spring dust, and the town-versus-ski-valley weather split.
Active wildfires and prescribed burns near Taos, from the National Interagency Fire Center's incident map, updated every few minutes. Prescribed burns are listed separately — a planned burn, not a wildfire — and the page always points at the county's emergency alerts first.
Six tools to start, built from two days of research and checked against the agencies' own pages: live wildfire status, today's air, downtown parking, visiting Taos Pueblo, common questions, and who to call.
A resident asked for market prices so herders don't trek for days only to be lowballed. The new price board carries NDMA's latest per-market figures — in February a two-year goat averaged Ksh 8,000 at Isiolo town but Ksh 4,500 at Oldonyiro and Merti — plus terms of trade in plain words, the county drought phase, and a read-aloud section for the town's two radio stations. Also live: a rain outlook for the long- and short-rains seasons, common questions, and who to call with only officially verified numbers.
Nobody here can look up whether the lake boats are running — so the new pages do the honest version: a dated status board for the Ilala and the island boats, a wind-and-rain read over the open water to Likoma (no wave forecast exists for Lake Malawi, and the page says so), WFP market prices for the boma and nearby markets, a rain-season tracker, common questions, and who to call with every number's provenance stated. The requested crowd-updated ferry tracker is recorded as an idea waiting on a trusted way to verify reports.