I built a real-time OSINT dashboard tracking the Iran-US war's impact on infrastructure rather than military play-by-play.
Stack: Next.js 16 (static SSG on Cloudflare Pages), react-globe.gl with Three.js (14 DRACO-compressed GLB weapon models, 45KB total), Cloudflare Workers for live data every 10-15 min, hand-rolled SVG sparklines, Tailwind CSS 4.
What it tracks: 3 AWS + 1 Microsoft data centers physically struck by Shahed drones, 16 submarine cables (Meta 2Africa declared force majeure), Hormuz at 3% throughput, 48 weapon systems with burn rates and depletion projections, 357 credibility-tiered sources across 6 tiers.
The editorial pipeline runs an 11-phase OSINT scan (Exa neural search, Twitter/bird CLI, Telegram, GDELT) with a 4-test bias detection protocol and Admiralty confidence ratings. Every finding screened against 8 disinformation patterns before entering the timeline.
The interesting technical bits: editorial status overrides when cloud provider APIs report "operational" while facilities are physically offline (ASSESSED badge system), a prebuild script that auto-syncs blog metadata/sitemap/commentary on every deploy, and the whole thing is curated by a persistent AI agent (Claudicle, open-source: github.com/tdimino/claudicle) with its own editorial voice and three-tier memory.
I work at an AI/ML startup. This is a side project. Freely available, no paywall.
There’s no broad consensus within the cognitive sciences as to how to declare or define the non-linear state of human consciousness; but our ancestors have bequeathed us the language to bring more soul and spirit into our A.I creations.
Given the paucity of Punic texts that we possess, I'd be surprised to learn that this script of which you speak is in any language other than Latin.
Most, if not all civilizations, practice child sacrifice to this day. It's called war, and it's practiced to such a ritualistic, feverish pitch that it may as well be a public festival glorifying death and national identity.
The "proof" that the Carthaginians, Canaanites, and Bronze Age Minoans practiced child sacrifice begs a misanthropic perspective from the start. While our modern society may think nothing of animals, and even reject the notion that they possess a soul, this was certainly not the case for the Etruscans or Canaanites. We have ample evidence, in the case of Etruria, that children who died prematurely were embalmed and buried with the remains of household pets, in the hope that the souls of both the animals and the children would be enticed to reincarnate in the presence of their living loved ones again. Being as close to residential districts as they were, these Carthaginian "tophets" served the same purpose--directing the souls of those who perished to return in new forms. The concept that these children were murdered to appease barbarous, foreign gods exposes a level of ignorance and anti-Semiticism that is unfortunately altogether too familiar in the modern-day.
As for the "Southern House of Knossos", the keyword here is "excarnation" and is an alternative method of mummification.
Stack: Next.js 16 (static SSG on Cloudflare Pages), react-globe.gl with Three.js (14 DRACO-compressed GLB weapon models, 45KB total), Cloudflare Workers for live data every 10-15 min, hand-rolled SVG sparklines, Tailwind CSS 4.
What it tracks: 3 AWS + 1 Microsoft data centers physically struck by Shahed drones, 16 submarine cables (Meta 2Africa declared force majeure), Hormuz at 3% throughput, 48 weapon systems with burn rates and depletion projections, 357 credibility-tiered sources across 6 tiers.
The editorial pipeline runs an 11-phase OSINT scan (Exa neural search, Twitter/bird CLI, Telegram, GDELT) with a 4-test bias detection protocol and Admiralty confidence ratings. Every finding screened against 8 disinformation patterns before entering the timeline.
The interesting technical bits: editorial status overrides when cloud provider APIs report "operational" while facilities are physically offline (ASSESSED badge system), a prebuild script that auto-syncs blog metadata/sitemap/commentary on every deploy, and the whole thing is curated by a persistent AI agent (Claudicle, open-source: github.com/tdimino/claudicle) with its own editorial voice and three-tier memory.
I work at an AI/ML startup. This is a side project. Freely available, no paywall.