About xin.bz
The information that moves global trade is public — airspace ground stops, storm tracks, earthquake alerts, cloud outages, disaster declarations. But it lives in a dozen agency websites, each with its own format, and almost all of it is noise on any given day. Enterprise platforms solve this for four thousand dollars a month. Everyone else keeps ten tabs open.
xin.bz watches the official sources every five minutes, filters out everything that is normal, and shows you only what needs attention. When the world is quiet, your screen is quiet. That's the entire product — built for freight forwarders, customs brokers, and operations teams who need the picture in ten seconds, not a briefing.
What does xin.bz monitor?
FAA national airspace status and temporary flight restrictions, NOAA National Hurricane Center storm tracking, USGS earthquake feeds, GDACS disaster alerts from the European Commission's Joint Research Centre, ECB reference exchange rates, and the operational status of AWS, Google Cloud, Cloudflare, GitHub, and Twilio. More sources — chokepoint transit data and sanctions lists — are on the roadmap.
Who runs it?
xin.bz is built and operated by Jeremy Ryan, an independent software developer in New York. Questions, feedback, or source suggestions: jeremy.ryan@codepause.com.