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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Pichilemu already had live sea conditions; this adds the next step — when and where to paddle out over the next two days. It matches each break's classic setup (the swell direction it likes, an offshore wind off the land, a workable size) against the forecast and lists the clean windows, with each spot marked for the level it suits. Punta de Lobos and Infiernillo keep their expert-only warning, and every window comes with the reminder that it describes the wind and swell — not whether the water is safe for you.
Colonia runs on day-trippers from across the river, and Uruguay refunds non-residents who pay with a card issued abroad part of the IVA — the whole tax on lodging, and right now nine points on restaurant meals and car hire, with a fuller 'IVA cero' decreed each summer. The new tool works out what comes back on what you plan to spend, shows it in dollars, Argentine pesos or reais at the day's official rates, and applies whichever rule is in force today. The business applies the benefit when you pay; this is here to help you plan.
The town page now opens with the day's sea state on the Yargoi crossing and where the rainy season stands, with who to call alongside — the things that matter most in the rains, summarised so you needn't open each tool. The crossing read stays plain description of the water, never a judgement that it's safe to cross.
A fuel-and-range planner for remote towns reached only by long roads with few fuel stops, and a river drought watch that places a river's live flow against its own long-term normal for the time of year. Both replace placeholder tools that had been registered ahead of their code.
The snow page relied on a live snow-depth measurement we can't yet confirm is published for the village, so we've taken it down rather than show a number we can't stand behind. We plan to bring it back for the winter once the official measurement is verified. The live village cameras and the village road pages remain the place to check the snow right now.
The weather-warnings tool can now read Environment and Climate Change Canada's official national warnings (MSC GeoMet, Open Government Licence – Canada), alongside the existing Irish and US sources. First used for Iqaluit's blizzard warnings; available to any Canadian town.
Three tools to start: garbage and recycling days for the village, a plain-English guide to getting Québec services done (health card, Hydro, SAAQ, finding a doctor) with the French names and numbers you'll hit, and a who-to-call directory for the central Pontiac.
Three tools to start: live Environment Canada weather warnings paired with the City's blizzard line for whether the city is open, a daylight clock for the long northern light, and a who-to-call directory with the City, RCMP, hospital and power-outage numbers.
NamWater's planned 10-hour supply cut for the booster-pump and pipeline upgrades, set for 23 April, was pushed back to avoid the town's annual trade fair, with a new date still to come. The 'What Opuwo is waiting on' board now reflects that.
Opuwo is the last dependable fuel before the tracks. Enter your tank and fuel use to see the longest fuel-free stretch on the Epupa Falls, Van Zyl's Pass and Purros routes, and how much extra to carry. Fuel beyond town is only at Ruacana and Sesfontein, and both run dry.
A new tool kind works out, from today's date, whether a seasonal ferry is running, a winter ice bridge is open, or the river is between the two with no vehicle crossing — for towns reached across a river that freezes. First used for the Yukon River at Dawson City. It always links the official real-time status, because the calendar is a guide, not a live sensor.
The first tools for Yellowknife: an aurora forecast worked from NOAA's space-weather model, the darkness and the season; a wildfire-smoke and air-quality check; a neighbour-reported power-outage board; a daylight clock; and a who-to-call directory.
The first tools for Dawson: the live Yukon River level and flow for the break-up flood watch, a river-crossing status that tells you whether the ferry, the ice bridge, or neither is running today, a daylight clock for the long swing from June to December, a neighbour-reported power-outage board, and a who-to-call directory.
Each town and tool page now tells search engines and AI assistants the town's exact place — its locality and real coordinates — so people searching for help near their town are likelier to be pointed straight at the local tool we built.
Five tools for the Yukon capital: today's daylight through the long northern swing, the live Yukon River level for the spring freshet, what's open right now, a neighbour-reported power-outage board for cold snaps, and who to call.
Five tools for Alaska's rainforest island town: a Cruise Ship Days board showing who's in port and how busy downtown will be, live NOAA tides for Tongass Narrows, the Gravina airport-ferry schedule and fares, who to call, and a community picks board.
Rain on the Mountains now shows on the town page how much rain the weather model has put on the slopes above town in the last two days, where the Nyamwamba's floods are born — with the next two days' outlook beside it. It is still not a flood warning; the real warnings come by radio.
Tools whose body is a list of common questions and answers now publish that Q&A as structured data, so search engines and answer assistants can point people straight to the question they were looking for. The answers shown to engines are exactly the ones on the page.
Bekaa Kafra, the highest village in Lebanon, is now on the platform with four tools built for life at 1,800 metres. A new Snow & the Road Up tool reads the mountain forecast for the village's own altitude and says in plain words how much snow is coming and lying now — pointing you to the official channels for whether the road is open. There's also a guide to visiting Saint Charbel's birthplace with the feast dates, a place for residents and the village's diaspora to share local picks, and the emergency numbers and nearest hospital a household or visitor needs.
Khiam, the border town in Marjeyoun, is now on the platform with four tools for a town living through a hard, conditional return. A new Aid & Recovery Navigator lets you tap your situation — home damaged or destroyed, renting and displaced, abroad, or unsafe land — and get a plain step-by-step plan with the papers to gather and exactly who to contact. Alongside it: a guide to how war-damage help works and how to stay safe coming back, the emergency, hospital and unexploded-ordnance numbers a household needs, and a generator-bill checker against this month's official tariff.
The Generator Bill Checker was showing a tariff that turned out to be about a year out of date. It now uses the Ministry of Energy and Water's most recent published monthly ceiling (May 2026); the fixed monthly fees are unchanged. The ministry resets the tariff every month, so always check the latest before you compare.
The Generator Bill Checker was showing a tariff that turned out to be about a year out of date. It now uses the Ministry of Energy and Water's most recent published monthly ceiling (May 2026); the fixed monthly fees are unchanged. The ministry resets the tariff every month, so always check the latest before you compare.
The Generator Bill Checker was showing a tariff that turned out to be about a year out of date. It now uses the Ministry of Energy and Water's most recent published monthly ceiling (May 2026); the fixed monthly fees are unchanged. The ministry resets the tariff every month, so always check the latest before you compare.
The Generator Bill Checker was showing a tariff that turned out to be about a year out of date. It now uses the Ministry of Energy and Water's most recent published monthly ceiling (May 2026); the fixed monthly fees are unchanged. The ministry resets the tariff every month, so always check the latest before you compare.
Three tools to start, built for a village living through war damage and a careful return: a plain, honest guide to war-damage help, compensation and unexploded-ordnance safety; Who to Call, with verified emergency numbers and how to report unexploded ordnance; and a Generator Bill Checker for the ishtirak subscription.
Four tools to start: a Generator Bill Checker that shows what your ishtirak subscription should cost at the official monthly tariff and flags overcharging; Who to Call in Tripoli, with verified emergency, hospital, water and electricity numbers; a community board where residents share the best sweets, fish and corners of the Corniche; and two self-guided walks through the Mamluk old city and the El-Mina seafront.
Enter your tank size and fuel use and it checks each road into Birdsville against its longest stretch with no fuel stop, then tells you how much extra to carry if your tank won't make it. It comes with the roads to check first and a remote-travel safety checklist.
It shows how the Wensum is flowing at Costessey Mill compared with normal for the time of year, worked out from 66 years of Environment Agency records, so you can see at a glance how dry things are getting. The official drought status and any hosepipe ban stay with the Environment Agency and Anglian Water, both linked on the page.
Three tools to start: a neighbour-reported board for where the power is out across the villages, a generator-bill checker that includes the +10% highland rate, and the emergency, hospital, council, water and power numbers in one place. More to come — these are in English for now, as the platform does not yet render Arabic.
Four tools to start: a plain guide to returning and rebuilding after the war (war-damage reporting, compensation, and how to stay safe around unexploded ordnance), a generator-bill checker against this month's official tariff, the emergency, hospital, council, water and power numbers in one place, and a live read of the sea off the coast for the fishing community. More to come — these are written in English for now, as the platform does not yet render Arabic.
Two building blocks other towns can reuse. The first is a board for places with only a handful of cash machines that run dry for days at a time: residents tap the one they found empty or broken, the reports clear themselves once it's refilled, and it always names a reliable place to withdraw — because a quiet board is never a promise that a machine has cash. The second extends the property-tax estimator to places that tax only a fraction of a home's value, like Arizona's 10%, so it now fits far more towns than the original Vermont model.
Put in your home's value to see a plain estimate of the yearly property-tax bill and where it goes — schools, the county, the city and Cochise College — using Cochise County's published 2025 rates. It also explains, in plain words, the things that can lower the bill for the many Bisbee residents who qualify: the senior valuation freeze, the homeowner rebate, and exemptions for widows, widowers, people with disabilities and disabled veterans, each with the Assessor's links.
Los cortes de luz son constantes en Mazunte, y peores tras las tormentas. Un tablero vecinal muestra dónde se fue la luz ahora mismo, para saber si es solo tu casa o toda la zona. Se acompaña de la línea de fallas de CFE (071) y la app CFE Contigo. Los reportes se borran solos cuando vuelve la luz, así que el tablero se mantiene al día por sí mismo.
Mazunte tiene pocos cajeros y se quedan sin efectivo o fuera de servicio por días, sobre todo en temporada alta y tras las tormentas. Ahora hay un tablero donde la gente del pueblo avisa cuál está vacío ahora mismo, para que no cruces el pueblo en balde. Verlo es libre; reportar pide una cuenta gratuita. Un cajero sin reportes no garantiza efectivo, así que el tablero también muestra dónde sacar con seguridad (los bancos de Pochutla) y recuerda traer algo de reserva.
Emergency numbers, the council and water contacts, and how to report an unexploded item — never touch it, call 125 or 1701.
See what your generator bill should be at this month's official maximum, and check whether you are being overcharged.
A plain guide to how war-damage help is meant to work in the south, who to contact, why it is slow, and how to stay safe from unexploded items when you go back.
The village is now live, with tools for returning home after the war, the generator bill, and who to call.
Emergency, water, power and phone numbers in one place, with tappable numbers.
Enter your amperage and the kilowatt-hours you used to see what the bill should be at this month's official maximum — and check whether your operator is charging over it.
Beirut is now live, starting with two tools built around the city's loudest daily costs.
A new tool that works out what a private-generator bill should be at the Ministry of Energy and Water's official monthly maximum, in Lebanese pounds and fresh dollars, and lets you check whether your operator is charging over the ceiling.
La nota del planificador ahora refleja que 2026 viene como un año récord de sargazo (boletín satelital de la USF, mayo de 2026), y la página de Punta Cana muestra de un vistazo cómo está el mes en curso.
When a month-by-month planner is pinned to a town page, it now shows the current month's standout factor — a high-sargassum or storm-risk flag when one applies — plus the price band, instead of a plain card.
Every tool on a town's page now shows a simple picture beside its name — a bus for the bus tool, a wave for tides and rivers, a phone for who to call — so you can find the one you want at a glance instead of reading every card.
Mzuzu gets one rainy season, and it decides both the harvest and which wards flood. This new tool tracks the last 30 days of rain against the 30-year average and the week ahead, with plain notes on what the rain means here — the low-lying wards that flood, the single maize crop, and why a wet year still doesn't fill the taps.
When the power goes, the first question is whether it's just your house or the whole area. This new board lets neighbours answer it for each other: tap the area you're in to report a cut, and see where else people are reporting one right now. It's filled in by residents, not ESCOM, so it sits alongside ESCOM's fault line (3030), not instead of it — and each report clears itself after a few hours, so the board empties when the power comes back.
The question people ask most before moving here is whether a local wage covers the rent. This new tool lets you put in your hourly pay and see your take-home after New Zealand tax, then what's left each week once rent and the essentials come out. The rents come from local reporting, the tax is worked out on the current Inland Revenue rates, and it's honest that it's a rough guide — it links IRD's own calculator and a free budgeting tool to check against.
The municipality office and what it handles, the nearest hospital in Damauli, the school, and Nepal's emergency numbers, including the line for reporting a landslide on the Dumre road — grouped, with tappable numbers.
The last 30 days against the 30-year average and the week ahead, with a season-by-season guide to what rain means here — for the Dumre road, the mountain views and the bazaar.