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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A resident asked for a way to see where you can take a laptop to work for a few hours, on a map, with the hours laid out so you can plan the day before. This new board does that: the library, a couple of cafés and a coworking desk, with a map (green pins are open right now, grey are closed), what each place is like to work in — wifi, sockets, how quiet it is — and the week at a glance. The library is the free, quiet anchor. Hours change, so each place shows the day we last checked it; tell us if something's wrong or missing.
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.
Condition labels now describe what the sea means for a swim — chop, rough days, and a cold-water note whenever the sea is below 15°C — instead of borrowing surf wording. The forecast data itself is unchanged.
Wave size, wind and sea temperature for Porthpean, Carlyon Bay and Pentewan, updated through the day. The bay's beaches are sheltered, so the page says plainly when the open-water reading is likely an overestimate.
Seven routes in one place — the Pentewan Valley Trail, the Green Corridor, three Clay Trails and two coast-path stretches — with distance, surface, parking and the honest notes about hills and steps.
Carlyon Bay, Porthpean, Charlestown and Pentewan — dog rules with dates, parking, toilets and the lifeguard situation, checked against the beach owners' own listings.
Council, health, money and food help, and police on one page, with tappable phone numbers. Services here are split across four organisations; this puts them back together.
Bins, the tip's booking system, NHS dentists, money help, and the Eden Project Locals' Pass — the questions that come up again and again, answered without jargon.
Our first Cornish town. Research covered what residents actually say — the town centre, the dental crisis, the tip's booking system — and the first three tools follow from it: common questions answered plainly, a who-to-call directory, and a beach guide with dog rules and dates.