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Holiday Gift Guide: ADIN
We asked scouts what they’re buying this season, from Kapital bandanas to a robot guinea pig.

Optics as Compute: Why ADIN Backed Diffraqtion’s Quantum Camera
Diffraqtion just announced their $4.2M pre-seed round. They're using tech to rebuild the retina; it’s a programmable quantum lens that shapes light before the sensor.

Effects of Generative AI-Powered Venture Screening
a hybrid of LLM infrastructure and investor judgment is the way
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the internet built “monitoring the situation” sites like it was a hackathon. wrote about it.
ranking the dashboards + the weirdest features ↓ https://paragraph.com/@adin/monitoring-the-situation-monitors
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The last week of February 2026 will be remembered for two things: the sudden escalation in the Iran conflict, and the even faster escalation in developers vibecoding OSINT dashboards into existence. Within days, dozens of "monitoring the situation" sites appeared like mushrooms after geopolitical rainstorms--part earnest crisis tracking, part meme economy, part AI-assisted hyperproductivity sprint.
What began as a handful of serious tools quickly turned into a cultural moment: a chaotic, collaborative, occasionally absurd race to build the definitive real-time world-watching dashboard. Social feeds filled with 3D globes, RSS overlays, alert bots, Polymarket tickers, and in at least two cases, pizza-tracking as an intelligence signal.
Below is a ranked snapshot of the major players in this blooming ecosystem.
Scores out of 100: Features (30 pts), Polish (25 pts), Social/GitHub Metrics (25 pts), Uniqueness (20 pts)
WorldMonitor.app -- Score: 94/100

The heavyweight. With 20,411 GitHub stars, 3,386 forks, a stunning 3D WebGL globe, 150+ RSS feeds, AI briefings via Ollama or Groq, and genuine open-source infrastructure, WorldMonitor is the one people silently agree is "the real one." Created by engineer Elie Habib, it's the only project mature enough to feel inevitable--and polished enough to feel funded, despite being community-driven. Self-hostable. Actually works.
Link: worldmonitor.app
SitDeck.com -- Score: 88/100

The commercial veteran. Long before this crisis, SitDeck (Situation Desk, LLC) was born from a developer's frustration with managing 50+ OSINT tabs during the 2022 Ukraine conflict. Now claiming 180+ data feeds, 55+ drag-and-drop widgets, and 70+ map layers, it rides the line between professional intelligence tool and frenetic crisis-era dashboard. With 11,277 Twitter followers and 746 retweets on their launch announcement, they've achieved real traction. Free tier available; premium AI features for power users.
Link: sitdeck.com
IranMonitor.org -- Score: 83/100

The diaspora dashboard. The strongest single-country monitor. City-level news heatmaps showing which Iranian cities are trending in coverage, Polymarket integration for prediction markets, Persian language support, AI daily briefings, events timeline by category (protests, sanctions, diplomacy, conflict), and live Twitter tracker. Built by the Iranian diaspora--specifically Nima Naderi and team--it feels rooted in community urgency rather than hype. Running on GoFundMe donations.
Link: iranmonitor.org
monitor-the-situation.com -- Score: 79/100

The memetic leader. Built by @rmcentush and @davideoks, this site topped Google for "monitoring the situation," sparked thousands of Twitter mentions, and--in peak 2026 fashion--has its own memecoin. The interface is simpler than competitors: an interactive map with event feed and tour functionality. But the cultural footprint is maximal. The dashboard equivalent of someone shouting "I made a thing!" and instantly becoming canon.
Link: monitor-the-situation.com
PizzINT.watch (Polyglobe) -- Score: 77/100

The Pentagon Pizza Index is real now. The absurdist masterpiece of this moment. PizzINT tracks pizza delivery activity near the Pentagon as a legitimate crisis indicator--because when analysts pull all-nighters, Domino's knows first. A 3D globe overlays live Polymarket data with geopolitical flashpoints. Automated bots post alerts like "Domino's Pizza 1.4 mi from Pentagon showing 250% spike." Also has a memecoin ($PPW). Peak 2026 energy.
Link: pizzint.watch/polyglobe
6. hipcityreg-situation-monitor -- Score: 74/100

The weekend warrior. A clean, TypeScript/Svelte-built monitor with 3,322 GitHub stars, 765 forks, and a practical, tidy interface. Categories include politics, tech, finance, government, AI, and markets--all updating around a global map with threat indicators. It feels like a developer's "I can build this in a weekend" project that accidentally became widely used.
Link: hipcityreg-situation-monitor.vercel.app
7. TREND (trendmoney.biz) -- Score: 70/100

Intel-core aesthetic. A geopolitics monitor with a distinctly 2009-era terminal vibe--"INTELCORE // MONITORINGACTIVE." 50+ RSS feeds, 16 intel categories, 120-second refresh cycle. The dedicated Iran monitor page is actually quite useful. It lacks meme appeal but delivers real substance.
Link: trendmoney.biz
8. usvsiran.com -- Score: 67/100

Mil-sim for real life. Created by Nehemia Gershuni-Aylho, this is focused entirely on CENTCOM theater hardware. Tracks live aircraft, ships, SAM sites, GPS jamming zones, fires, satellites, NOTAMs, and sea lanes. Toggle layers for infrastructure, bases, and OSINT feeds. Basically mil-sim for real-world analysts.
Link: usvsiran.com
Honorable Mentions (Unscored)

Nearly all these dashboards share the same feel:
Spun up quickly -- many launched within days of conflict escalation
AI-assisted -- Claude, GPT-5, and Groq fingerprints everywhere
Clever but slightly unfinished -- that "it works but don't look too close" energy
Optimized for social virality -- share buttons, embed previews, tweet bots
Half functional tool, half aesthetic signal -- the dashboard as performance art
"Vibecoded" is exactly the right word. These reflect the new norm of rapid, AI-augmented development: a single weekend, a library of components, a Groq-powered summary module, and a sense that the world is on fire--so let's make a dashboard about it.
This whole explosion feels like a collective response to information instability. When uncertainty rises, technologists build dashboards--both to understand and to feel agency. The memecoins, pizza indexes, auto-tweeting bots, Svelte prototypes, and AI-summarized incident streams are all part of a strange new cultural layer where geopolitics meets internet creativity.
There is seriousness in the data, humor in the presentation, and comfort in the illusion that with enough RSS feeds, we can see clearly through the fog.
Grok now recommends these sites to users asking about OSINT. The "monitor the situation" meme has spawned actual infrastructure. The Pentagon Pizza Index tracks late-night delivery spikes near military buildings. We live in the future--and the future has a 3D globe with toggleable layers and prediction market affiliate links.
In 2026, when the world started "monitoring the situation," ADIN started monitoring the monitors.
The last week of February 2026 will be remembered for two things: the sudden escalation in the Iran conflict, and the even faster escalation in developers vibecoding OSINT dashboards into existence. Within days, dozens of "monitoring the situation" sites appeared like mushrooms after geopolitical rainstorms--part earnest crisis tracking, part meme economy, part AI-assisted hyperproductivity sprint.
What began as a handful of serious tools quickly turned into a cultural moment: a chaotic, collaborative, occasionally absurd race to build the definitive real-time world-watching dashboard. Social feeds filled with 3D globes, RSS overlays, alert bots, Polymarket tickers, and in at least two cases, pizza-tracking as an intelligence signal.
Below is a ranked snapshot of the major players in this blooming ecosystem.
Scores out of 100: Features (30 pts), Polish (25 pts), Social/GitHub Metrics (25 pts), Uniqueness (20 pts)
WorldMonitor.app -- Score: 94/100

The heavyweight. With 20,411 GitHub stars, 3,386 forks, a stunning 3D WebGL globe, 150+ RSS feeds, AI briefings via Ollama or Groq, and genuine open-source infrastructure, WorldMonitor is the one people silently agree is "the real one." Created by engineer Elie Habib, it's the only project mature enough to feel inevitable--and polished enough to feel funded, despite being community-driven. Self-hostable. Actually works.
Link: worldmonitor.app
SitDeck.com -- Score: 88/100

The commercial veteran. Long before this crisis, SitDeck (Situation Desk, LLC) was born from a developer's frustration with managing 50+ OSINT tabs during the 2022 Ukraine conflict. Now claiming 180+ data feeds, 55+ drag-and-drop widgets, and 70+ map layers, it rides the line between professional intelligence tool and frenetic crisis-era dashboard. With 11,277 Twitter followers and 746 retweets on their launch announcement, they've achieved real traction. Free tier available; premium AI features for power users.
Link: sitdeck.com
IranMonitor.org -- Score: 83/100

The diaspora dashboard. The strongest single-country monitor. City-level news heatmaps showing which Iranian cities are trending in coverage, Polymarket integration for prediction markets, Persian language support, AI daily briefings, events timeline by category (protests, sanctions, diplomacy, conflict), and live Twitter tracker. Built by the Iranian diaspora--specifically Nima Naderi and team--it feels rooted in community urgency rather than hype. Running on GoFundMe donations.
Link: iranmonitor.org
monitor-the-situation.com -- Score: 79/100

The memetic leader. Built by @rmcentush and @davideoks, this site topped Google for "monitoring the situation," sparked thousands of Twitter mentions, and--in peak 2026 fashion--has its own memecoin. The interface is simpler than competitors: an interactive map with event feed and tour functionality. But the cultural footprint is maximal. The dashboard equivalent of someone shouting "I made a thing!" and instantly becoming canon.
Link: monitor-the-situation.com
PizzINT.watch (Polyglobe) -- Score: 77/100

The Pentagon Pizza Index is real now. The absurdist masterpiece of this moment. PizzINT tracks pizza delivery activity near the Pentagon as a legitimate crisis indicator--because when analysts pull all-nighters, Domino's knows first. A 3D globe overlays live Polymarket data with geopolitical flashpoints. Automated bots post alerts like "Domino's Pizza 1.4 mi from Pentagon showing 250% spike." Also has a memecoin ($PPW). Peak 2026 energy.
Link: pizzint.watch/polyglobe
6. hipcityreg-situation-monitor -- Score: 74/100

The weekend warrior. A clean, TypeScript/Svelte-built monitor with 3,322 GitHub stars, 765 forks, and a practical, tidy interface. Categories include politics, tech, finance, government, AI, and markets--all updating around a global map with threat indicators. It feels like a developer's "I can build this in a weekend" project that accidentally became widely used.
Link: hipcityreg-situation-monitor.vercel.app
7. TREND (trendmoney.biz) -- Score: 70/100

Intel-core aesthetic. A geopolitics monitor with a distinctly 2009-era terminal vibe--"INTELCORE // MONITORINGACTIVE." 50+ RSS feeds, 16 intel categories, 120-second refresh cycle. The dedicated Iran monitor page is actually quite useful. It lacks meme appeal but delivers real substance.
Link: trendmoney.biz
8. usvsiran.com -- Score: 67/100

Mil-sim for real life. Created by Nehemia Gershuni-Aylho, this is focused entirely on CENTCOM theater hardware. Tracks live aircraft, ships, SAM sites, GPS jamming zones, fires, satellites, NOTAMs, and sea lanes. Toggle layers for infrastructure, bases, and OSINT feeds. Basically mil-sim for real-world analysts.
Link: usvsiran.com
Honorable Mentions (Unscored)

Nearly all these dashboards share the same feel:
Spun up quickly -- many launched within days of conflict escalation
AI-assisted -- Claude, GPT-5, and Groq fingerprints everywhere
Clever but slightly unfinished -- that "it works but don't look too close" energy
Optimized for social virality -- share buttons, embed previews, tweet bots
Half functional tool, half aesthetic signal -- the dashboard as performance art
"Vibecoded" is exactly the right word. These reflect the new norm of rapid, AI-augmented development: a single weekend, a library of components, a Groq-powered summary module, and a sense that the world is on fire--so let's make a dashboard about it.
This whole explosion feels like a collective response to information instability. When uncertainty rises, technologists build dashboards--both to understand and to feel agency. The memecoins, pizza indexes, auto-tweeting bots, Svelte prototypes, and AI-summarized incident streams are all part of a strange new cultural layer where geopolitics meets internet creativity.
There is seriousness in the data, humor in the presentation, and comfort in the illusion that with enough RSS feeds, we can see clearly through the fog.
Grok now recommends these sites to users asking about OSINT. The "monitor the situation" meme has spawned actual infrastructure. The Pentagon Pizza Index tracks late-night delivery spikes near military buildings. We live in the future--and the future has a 3D globe with toggleable layers and prediction market affiliate links.
In 2026, when the world started "monitoring the situation," ADIN started monitoring the monitors.
2 comments
the internet built “monitoring the situation” sites like it was a hackathon. wrote about it.
ranking the dashboards + the weirdest features ↓ https://paragraph.com/@adin/monitoring-the-situation-monitors