About NeoLexx

The world has a baseline.
NeoLexx shows when it moves.

NeoLexx is a multi-signal monitoring system for spotting change from standard across news, flights, fires, markets, maritime activity, and events. It is strongest as a where-to-look-next system.
What NeoLexx is

NeoLexx is a situational-awareness console. Its core job is simple: show where current activity is unusual for that place, not just where activity is big.

That makes it strongest at triage. Scan the world, find the countries worth attention, then drill down into what is actually driving the move.

NeoLexx helps you decide where to look. It does not replace context, judgment, or follow-on investigation.

Core
Anomaly-first
NeoLexx is built to show where activity breaks from local normal, not where raw volume is simply large.
Method
Cross-signal
News, flights, fires, markets, maritime, and events sit on the same surface so you can scan for alignment.
Workflow
Drill-driven
The overview tells you where to look. The drills tell you why a place is moving.
Reading the system

How to read NeoLexx quickly

Most NeoLexx pages are using the same basic model: current state versus local normal.
Baseline and anomaly

Every major signal has a baseline. The exact formula changes by domain, but the principle does not: compare what is happening now to what this place usually looks like.

Flights use 30-day same-hour history. Fire country anomaly uses current 24-hour activity against a longer snapshot baseline. Maritime leans on recent-average comparison because port histories mature more slowly. Markets, news, and events each use their own tuned logic.

Z-score

A z-score measures how far the current reading sits from the baseline. 0 is near normal. Negative values are below baseline. Positive values are above baseline.

The key point: z-scores are self-referencing. A quiet country can score high with far less raw activity than a busy one.

How the shared anomaly language reads on screen:
≤ -3.0
-3.0 to -1.5
-1.5 to +1.5
+1.5 to +3.0
≥ +3.0
below baselinenear normalabove baseline
Significant decrease
Purple
A strong negative anomaly. Activity is far below normal for that place.
Mild decrease
Violet
Below baseline, but not at the strongest anomaly tier.
Near normal
Blue
Current activity is sitting close to that place's normal range.
Mild increase
Amber
Above baseline and worth noting, but not automatically dramatic.
Significant increase
Red
A strong positive anomaly. This is the clearest spike tier.

A high signal means unusual, not automatically important or dangerous. NeoLexx is strongest when you read signal level and signal meaning separately.

Shared structure

How the pages are built

The UI grammar is shared across most of NeoLexx. Learn it once and the rest of the product becomes easier to read.
Sidecar
The sidecar is the fast context layer: rankings, summaries, and supporting readouts without opening a drill.
Legend
The legend tells you how to read the current color surface. Most pages share the same anomaly language. Markets are the main exception.
Tooling
The top-left tooling menu controls page state: filters, modes, windows, view toggles, and signal-specific switches.
Views and drills
Most pages move from overview to local detail. Some stop at country drill; others keep going into airports, ports, hexes, or article heuristics.
Typical navigation path

Not every page uses every step, but most of the product follows the same general path from broad signal to local explanation.

View 1
World view
Start broad. This tells you which countries are moving.
View 2
Hex view
Where supported, zoom in to spatial clusters instead of whole-country averages.
View 3
Country drill
The main explanation layer: what is driving the move in this place.
View 4
Deeper drill
Some pages go further into airports, ports, local cells, or article-level logic.
What the sidecar is for

The sidecar is usually the fastest orientation surface on a page. Before you click anything, it tells you which countries, airports, ports, or articles are carrying the signal.

Read it first
Rankings firstUse the sidecar to see what is driving the page before you open a drill.
Legend secondCheck whether the current page is showing anomaly, raw intensity, density, or direction.
Tooling thirdConfirm the active window, filter, and mode so you know what surface you are really reading.
What drilling is doing

Drills are not decorative popups. They are the layer where NeoLexx stops saying this country is moving and starts showing why it is moving.

Typical drill workflow
1
Open the overviewUse the main map or ranked surface to identify the countries or clusters that stand out.
2
Open the country drillRead the local metrics, supporting lists, and signal explanation before you draw a conclusion.
3
Go deeper when availablePages like News, Flights, Fire, and Maritime have deeper drills for article heuristics, airports, hexes, or ports.
Signal Surface

News

News aggregates, weights, assigns, and baselines article activity by country across 101 international sources.
What it tracks
  • Trust-weighted coverage velocity by country.
  • Country assignment from entity extraction on headlines and summaries.
  • Corroboration when multiple credible sources align in the same window.
What picture it creates
  • Where coverage is moving unusually relative to normal for that country.
  • Whether the signal looks broad or narrow based on trust mix, source mix, and category spread.
Main caveat

News is a coverage surface. It tells you where attention is abnormal, not what happened on the ground.

Controls
ControlWhat it changes
WindowChanges the active time slice so you can compare immediate spikes with broader coverage bursts.
Category filtersNarrow the page and drill content to one topic family when you want a cleaner signal surface.
SearchFilters the country list or article set by keyword when you already have a place or topic in mind.
Views and drills
  • News Dashboard for ranked country scanning.
  • News Heatmap for geographic context.
  • Country drill for trust mix, corroboration, category spread, and article feed.
  • Article heuristic drill for country-attribution logic.
How to read the page
Tile size is not raw volumeThe main surface is showing trust-weighted abnormality, so a smaller article count can still matter more than a noisy country with constant coverage.
Corroboration changes confidenceSeveral independent high-trust sources aligning is stronger than one source repeating itself through syndication.
The drill is the explanation layerOpen the country drill before trusting a spike. That is where source quality, article spread, and category mix become readable.
Drill walkthrough
1
Open country drillClick the country to move from the scan surface into the actual explanation layer.
2
Read signal mixUse trust, corroboration, and category spread to tell whether the country is seeing broad attention or a narrow article burst.
3
Open heuristic drillUse the glass-box article view when you need to inspect exactly why an article was assigned to that country.
Source weighting

NeoLexx reads from monitored sources, but it does not treat them equally. Higher-trust outlets carry more weight in country velocity, while lower-trust outlets still count as attention without dominating the signal.

Global wires
1.0
Official / institutional
0.9
High-standard broadcasters
0.8
Major national outlets
0.7
High-volume / partisan
0.5
Tabloid / state narrative
0.3
What the scale is doing
Trust is a multiplierA weak source can still appear in the system, but its contribution to country-level velocity is lighter.
Volume still mattersA burst of low-trust coverage can still show that attention exists. It just does not count like a broad high-trust spike.
Independent confirmation matters moreSeveral unrelated strong sources lining up is more meaningful than one outlet echoing through syndication.
Attribution and glass-box logic

News is strongest when you can inspect why a country spiked. That is why NeoLexx exposes attribution logic and article drills instead of only returning a black-box score.

  • Source trust keeps one weak outlet from dominating the signal by sheer volume.
  • Corroboration matters because several high-trust outlets aligning is stronger than one source repeating itself.
  • Heuristic transparency matters because you can inspect why an article was assigned to a country instead of trusting a black box.
Why the heuristic drill matters
1
Open the articleStart from the country drill when one article looks important or suspicious.
2
Inspect attributionUse the heuristic view to see why the article was assigned to that country or topic.
3
Confirm the signalTreat a cluster as stronger when the article logic and source quality both hold up under inspection.
Step 1
Start with the hottest countries to find where attention is moving faster than normal.
Step 2
Open the country drill to see whether the signal is broad, corroborated, and supported by better sources.
Step 3
Use the heuristic drill before trusting a weak attribution or a noisy article cluster.
Signal Surface

Flight Tracker

Flight Tracker turns live aviation observations into airport and country movement analysis.
What it tracks
  • Inbound and outbound airport movement built from resolved routes.
  • Country-level movement rolled up from airport truth rather than raw aircraft density.
  • Category splits where the page can separate commercial, general aviation, and military-adjacent patterns.
What picture it creates
  • Where movement is unusual relative to each airport or country's own same-hour rhythm.
  • Whether a move is broad or concentrated by showing which airports are actually driving it.
Main caveat

Flights depend on route resolution. A weaker route environment means less of the airport truth surface is visible.

Controls
ControlWhat it changes
Baseline windowChanges whether the page is comparing current movement to the same hour over recent history or a broader comparison mode.
Direction filtersLets you separate inbound and outbound movement when the balance itself is the story.
Category filtersHelps isolate commercial, general aviation, or military-adjacent behavior where available.
Views and drills
  • World and country view for broad movement.
  • Hex view for airport-cluster geography.
  • Country, airport, and hex drills for local explanation.
How to read the page
Country color is a rollupA country signal is only a summary of the airports underneath it. The real explanation is always in the drill.
Airport truth beats sky densityThis page is built from airport and route movement, not from counting every visible plane in the sky.
Direction mattersInbound-heavy and outbound-heavy movement can mean very different things even when totals look similar.
Drill walkthrough
1
Open country drillStart at country level to see the direction split and the airports carrying the move.
2
Open airport drillGo deeper when one hub is clearly carrying the signal and you need route or local context.
3
Use hex drillSwitch to spatial concentration when cluster geography matters more than whole-country totals.
Step 1
Use the country drill first when the map shows a strong move.
Step 2
Use the airport drill next if the change looks concentrated in one hub.
Step 3
Use the hex drill when spatial concentration matters more than national rollup.
Signal Surface

Fire Tracker

Fire Tracker is built to show abnormal fire behavior, not just where detections exist.
What it tracks
  • Thermal anomaly detections from NASA FIRMS VIIRS.
  • Fire radiative power and local clustering.
  • Country anomaly from current 24-hour activity versus a longer snapshot baseline.
What picture it creates
  • Where fire behavior is unusual for the place, not just where fires are present.
  • Whether the signal is diffuse, intense, persistent, or concentrated once you drill into it.
Main caveat

This is not just a dot map. The important question is whether current behavior is abnormal for the place.

Controls
ControlWhat it changes
24H / 7D / 30DChanges the comparison window and historical context the page is using for the current surface.
Confidence filtersLets you cut the surface down to nominal-plus or high-confidence detections when you want a cleaner fire picture.
V1 noteDay / night filtering is not exposed in the current Fire Tracker panel. For V1, the page stays focused on window and confidence controls.

Fire uses two reading modes. Country view is an anomaly surface. Hex view is a local intensity surface built from recent fire detections. Do not read those two views the same way.

Views and drills
  • World and country view for broad anomaly scanning.
  • Hex view for local clustering.
  • Point and satellite-linked views for direct local context.
How to read the page
Country color is anomalyAt the country level you are reading deviation from expected fire behavior, not raw total heat alone.
Hex color is local intensityOnce you zoom into hex mode, the page becomes a recent-detection aggregation surface. It is about where heat is concentrated now.
The drill separates count from intensityA place with many low-FRP detections and a place with fewer high-FRP detections can look very different once you open the drill.
Drill walkthrough
1
Open country drillUse the metric grid to separate detections, total FRP, mean FRP, and anomaly score.
2
Switch to hex modeZoom in when you need to see whether the country signal is concentrated or geographically diffuse.
3
Open hex drillUse the local cell metrics and satellite viewport when you need the physical footprint of the fire signal, not just the national rollup.
Step 1
Start with the country anomaly layer to find where the 24-hour signal stands out.
Step 2
Use the country drill to separate high point count from high intensity.
Step 3
Use hex and point layers when you need local spatial texture instead of only country-level movement.
Signal Surface

Market Heatmap

Market Heatmap shows country-level equity movement, with a different visual logic than the anomaly-first pages.
What it tracks
  • Weighted country equity baskets built from tracked indices, ETFs, and selected tickers.
  • Top positive and negative movers inside each country basket.
  • Commodity context from major global contracts.
What picture it creates
  • Where countries are moving sharply in aggregate.
  • Whether a move is broad or concentrated once you open the drill and inspect the movers.
Main caveat

Markets are the main visual exception to the shared anomaly palette. A sharp move is not automatically geopolitical.

Controls
ControlWhat it changes
LiveShows the current weighted move for each country basket without treating it as an anomaly surface.
vs 24H / 7D / 30DChanges the baseline comparison so you can decide whether you care about immediate movement or deviation from a broader recent norm.
Ticker stripKeeps the strongest movers visible without opening a country drill.
Views and drills
  • Country map for broad equity direction.
  • Country drill for average move, baseline comparison, and top movers.
  • Commodity strip for macro context.
How to read the page
Color is direction firstThe market map is telling you whether the country basket is up, down, or flat, not using the same anomaly color logic as flights or news.
Average can hide dispersionA mildly positive country can still contain violent internal divergence. The drill is where you see whether one or two names are carrying the move.
Baseline mode changes the meaningLive tells you what is happening now. Relative modes tell you whether today looks unusual for that market.
Drill walkthrough
1
Open country drillStart with the average move and baseline comparison to learn whether the basket is simply green or genuinely unusual.
2
Read the moversUse the positive and negative movers to tell whether the country signal is broad or being carried by a few names.
3
Cross-check the storyOpen News or Event Feed when a country move looks operationally meaningful rather than purely financial.
Step 1
Choose the baseline mode based on whether you care about immediate movement or a broader relative move.
Step 2
Use the country drill to tell whether the move is broad-based or narrow.
Step 3
Cross-check with News and Events if a country move looks operationally meaningful.
Signal Surface

Maritime Tracker

Maritime Tracker watches port-call behavior with more caution than some other NeoLexx domains.
What it tracks
  • Port-call activity from Global Fishing Watch event truth.
  • Port and country movement against recent norms.
  • Vessel-class mix in the underlying data and drill surfaces, even when the main panel stays broad.
What picture it creates
  • Where port behavior is unusual at the country and port level.
  • Whether that signal is mature or thin depending on baseline depth, freshness, and coverage.
Main caveat

Maritime is directional, not precision-perfect. Coverage, freshness, and baseline maturity matter here more than most pages.

Controls
ControlWhat it changes
Baseline modeLets the page compare current activity against the more reactive same-hour style view or the smoother recent-average view, depending on what the tracker currently exposes.
Country drill entryMoves from the broad country surface into the actual port-level explanation layer.
Port selectionLets you go one level deeper when one port is clearly carrying the signal.
V1 noteThe main Maritime panel does not currently expose cargo / carrier / bunker toggle buttons. Vessel-class separation is still available deeper in the drill surfaces.

Maritime should be read cautiously. A country color is only a starting hint. The useful trust signal lives in freshness, baseline maturity, and the actual ports driving the move.

Views and drills
  • Country view for broad port activity scanning.
  • Port and density surfaces for local concentration where supported.
  • Country and port drills for actual interpretation.
How to read the page
Trust the drill more than the mapThe map tells you where to look. The drill tells you whether the signal is backed by enough history and fresh enough data to matter.
Coverage is unevenA mature shipping hub and a thinly covered port do not deserve the same confidence, even if both look elevated.
Port mix mattersA country move can be driven by one cargo port, a broad carrier shift, or a thin bunker pattern. The drill is where that becomes legible.
Drill walkthrough
1
Open country drillStart by checking which ports are actually carrying the country move and how much baseline coverage exists.
2
Check maturity and freshnessTreat warming-up ports, stale feeds, or sparse comparisons differently from mature active ports.
3
Open port drillUse the local rhythm and current-vs-baseline view when one port needs its own explanation.
Step 1
Start broad, but trust the drill more than the country color alone.
Step 2
Check for maturity cues before making strong judgments about a port or country anomaly.
Step 3
Treat the page cautiously when upstream freshness or baseline depth looks weak.
Signal Surface

Event Feed

Event Feed is the cross-signal prioritization layer.
What it tracks
  • Combined movement from news, flights, fires, maritime, and markets.
  • Country event levels that compress several signals into one ranked surface.
What picture it creates
  • Where several domains align at the same time.
  • Which countries deserve investigation first when attention is limited.
Main caveat

This is a where-to-look layer, not a conclusion engine. A high level means several signals are elevated together, not that NeoLexx knows what happened.

How the composite works
Five domains feed one surfaceEvent Feed compresses news, flights, fires, maritime, and markets into one country-level triage score.
Contribution matters more than the badgeTwo countries can both look hot while being driven by completely different mixes of signals.
Composite is downstreamEvent Feed is strongest when it points you back into the underlying pages instead of being treated as its own final truth surface.
Views and drills
  • Ranked event surface for fast triage.
  • Country event context through the signal contributions and linked underlying pages.
How to read the page
Read event level as priorityA higher level means stronger combined movement, not stronger certainty about cause.
Look for corroboration across domainsA country with several medium signals can be more durable than one with a single overpowering news spike.
Use the linked pagesValidation happens in News, Flights, Fire, Maritime, or Markets, not inside the badge alone.
Drill walkthrough
1
Open the eventStart from the ranked surface when you need a fast answer to where attention should go next.
2
Read the contributing signalsCheck which domains are actually carrying the composite before trusting the level at face value.
3
Validate in the source pagesUse the linked drills in the underlying pages to decide whether the event is broad, noisy, or well corroborated.
Step 1
Use Event Feed first when you need a cross-signal triage surface.
Step 2
Validate in the underlying pages before trusting the composite at face value.
Step 3
Read event level as priority, not certainty.
Signal Surface

Live Streams

Live Streams is a context layer, not an anomaly layer.
What it tracks
  • Broadcast context from official or near-official streams.
  • Picture-in-picture workflow for monitoring one stream while watching another surface.
What picture it creates
  • Live context beside analytical pages when you want direct broadcast texture during a live story.
Main caveat

Useful for context, weak as a standalone analytical surface.

Views
  • Stream wall for direct viewing.
  • PiP support for side-by-side monitoring.
Drill chain
  • Use it next to Events or News rather than treating it as an anomaly page.
Step 1
Use it during active stories when direct broadcast context matters.
Step 2
Keep it next to another signal page rather than treating it as the primary surface.
Step 3
Use PiP deliberately when you want one stream in view while working elsewhere.
Signal Surface

Multiview

Multiview is the operational layout layer.
What it tracks
  • A custom 2x2 workspace built from other NeoLexx pages.
  • Cross-signal monitoring without tab hopping.
What picture it creates
  • How several signals are moving at once in one operator layout.
Main caveat

Multiview adds workflow value, not new truth. It is only as good as the pages you place inside it.

Views
  • 2x2 page grid with user-selected NeoLexx surfaces.
Drill chain
  • There is no deeper drill logic here. Multiview exists to keep several other surfaces visible at once.
Step 1
Use it for active monitoring when you want several pages open at once.
Step 2
Start with Events, News, Flights, and Fire as a general watch layout.
Step 3
Swap in Maritime or Markets when the story demands them more than another pane.
Attribution

Who NeoLexx gets information from

This page is the direct provenance list for NeoLexx: active upstream data systems, monitored news publishers, and the live channels used in the stream layer.
Data Systems

Operational providers by domain

These are the active upstream data systems NeoLexx currently uses across flights, fire, maritime, markets, and commodities.
adsb.lol · adsb.one · adsb.fi · airplanes.live
Live aviation position providers used for the global flight presence sweep.
ADSBDB · HexDB
Aircraft enrichment and route-resolution support for callsigns, registrations, and airport pairs.
NASA FIRMS VIIRS + MODIS
Thermal anomaly detections and fire radiative power for the Fire Tracker.
Global Fishing Watch
Port-call and maritime event data for the Maritime Tracker.
Yahoo Finance · Stooq
Equity and market quote providers used for country baskets, with Stooq as fallback where needed.
yfinance
Commodity futures download path used for WTI, Brent, Gold, Natural Gas, Wheat, and Copper.
News Sources

101 monitored publishers

These are the news outlets currently monitored by NeoLexx for the news layer, heatmap, velocity logic, and event contributions.
🌐 Reuters
EN · trust 1.0
🇺🇸 AP News
EN · trust 1.0
🇺🇸 Bloomberg
EN · trust 0.8
🇹🇷 Anadolu Agency
EN · trust 0.5
🇨🇳 Xinhua
EN · trust 0.3
🇺🇸 New York Times
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 Wall Street Journal
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 Washington Post
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 Los Angeles Times
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 USA Today
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 CNN
EN · trust 0.5
🇺🇸 Fox News
EN · trust 0.5
🇺🇸 Politico
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 ABC News
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 NBC News
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 CBS News
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 New York Post
EN · trust 0.3
🇺🇸 Houston Chronicle
EN · trust 0.5
🇺🇸 The Hill
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 SFGATE
EN · trust 0.7
🇺🇸 HuffPost
EN · trust 0.5
🇺🇸 NPR
EN · trust 0.8
🇬🇧 BBC News
EN · trust 0.8
🇬🇧 The Guardian
EN · trust 0.8
🇬🇧 The Telegraph
EN · trust 0.7
🇬🇧 Daily Mail
EN · trust 0.3
🇬🇧 The Sun
EN · trust 0.3
🇬🇧 The Mirror
EN · trust 0.3
🇬🇧 The Independent
EN · trust 0.7
🇬🇧 Sky News
EN · trust 0.8
🇬🇧 Financial Times
EN · trust 0.8
🇨🇦 Toronto Star
EN · trust 0.7
🇨🇦 The Globe and Mail
EN · trust 0.7
🇨🇦 Global News
EN · trust 0.7
🇦🇺 ABC News (AU)
EN · trust 0.8
🇦🇺 news.com.au
EN · trust 0.5
🇳🇿 The New Zealand Herald
EN · trust 0.7
🇩🇪 Deutsche Welle
EN · trust 0.8
🇪🇺 Euronews
EN · trust 0.7
🇫🇷 France 24
EN · trust 0.8
🇫🇷 Le Monde
FR · trust 0.8
🇩🇪 Der Spiegel
DE · trust 0.7
🇪🇸 El País
ES · trust 0.7
🇺🇦 The Kyiv Independent
EN · trust 0.8
🇪🇺 Politico Europe
EN · trust 0.8
🇪🇪 ERR News
EN · trust 0.8
🌐 Eurasianet
EN · trust 0.8
🇵🇱 Notes from Poland
EN · trust 0.7
🌐 Radio Free Europe
EN · trust 0.8
🇮🇳 Times of India
EN · trust 0.7
🇮🇳 The Hindu
EN · trust 0.8
🇮🇳 The Indian Express
EN · trust 0.5
🇮🇳 Hindustan Times
EN · trust 0.5
🇨🇳 China Daily
EN · trust 0.3
🇭🇰 South China Morning Post
EN · trust 0.7
🇯🇵 The Japan Times
EN · trust 0.5
🇯🇵 NHK World
EN · trust 0.8
🇯🇵 Nikkei Asia
EN · trust 0.8
🇸🇬 Channel NewsAsia
EN · trust 0.8
🇸🇬 The Straits Times
EN · trust 0.7
🇲🇾 The Star
EN · trust 0.5
🇹🇭 Bangkok Post
EN · trust 0.5
🇮🇩 The Jakarta Post
EN · trust 0.5
🇵🇭 Rappler
EN · trust 0.7
🇧🇩 The Daily Star
EN · trust 0.5
🇵🇰 Dawn
EN · trust 0.5
🇶🇦 Al Jazeera
EN · trust 0.7
🇸🇦 Al Arabiya
EN · trust 0.5
🇪🇬 Ahram Online
EN · trust 0.6
🇮🇱 Jerusalem Post
EN · trust 0.5
🇮🇷 Mehr News
EN · trust 0.3
🇸🇦 Arab News
EN · trust 0.5
🇹🇷 Daily Sabah
EN · trust 0.5
🌎 Merco Press
EN · trust 0.7
🇧🇷 Folha de S.Paulo
PT · trust 0.5
🇲🇽 El Universal
ES · trust 0.7
🌍 AllAfrica
EN · trust 0.5
🇿🇦 News24
EN · trust 0.7
🌍 News24 Africa
EN · trust 0.7
🌍 Africanews
EN · trust 0.7
🇰🇪 The Standard (Kenya)
EN · trust 0.6
🇰🇪 Nation.Africa
EN · trust 0.7
🌍 The EastAfrican
EN · trust 0.7
🇳🇬 Premium Times
EN · trust 0.7
🇳🇬 Sahara Reporters
EN · trust 0.5
🇵🇪 El Comercio
ES · trust 0.7
🇷🇺 TASS
EN · trust 0.3
🇺🇸 White House
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🇺🇸 Pentagon / DOD
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🇺🇸 US State Dept.
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🇬🇧 UK Ministry of Defence
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🌐 NATO
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🌐 UN News
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🇪🇺 EU Commission
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🇫🇷 France Diplomatie
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🇨🇦 Global Affairs Canada
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🇮🇳 PIB India
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🇹🇼 Taiwan MOFA
EN · trust 0.9 · official
🇹🇼 Taiwan Presidential Office
EN · trust 0.8 · official
🇮🇱 Israel gov.il
HE · trust 0.8 · official
🇰🇷 The Korea Herald
EN · trust 0.7
Live Channels

18 stream channels

These are the live video channels currently configured in the NeoLexx stream layer.
🇶🇦 Al Jazeera
24/7 World News
🇫🇷 France 24
French Perspective
🇩🇪 DW News
Deutsche Welle
🇹🇷 TRT World
Turkish Global News
🇪🇺 Euro News
Pan-European News
🌍 Africanews
Pan-African Geopolitics
🇺🇸 ABC News Live
ABC 24/7 Streaming News
🇺🇸 CBS News 24/7
CBS Streaming News
🇺🇸 NBC News NOW
NBC 24/7 US & World
🇬🇧 Sky News
UK & World News
🇯🇵 NHK World-Japan
Japan & Asian Security
🇦🇺 ABC Australia
Australian Broadcasting
🇸🇬 CNA
Singapore and Indo-Pacific news
🇹🇼 TaiwanPlus
Taiwan and Indo-Pacific perspective
🇨🇳 CGTN
Chinese state-media global feed
🇮🇱 i24NEWS English
Israel and Middle East coverage
🇮🇳 WION
Indian global news perspective
🇿🇦 SABC News
South African public broadcaster
Limits

Where NeoLexx is strong, and where it is not

NeoLexx is strongest as a starting point for investigation, not as a perfect truth surface.
Strong at
  • Surfacing unusual behavior. Baseline comparison catches movement that raw volume would bury.
  • Cross-signal scanning. It is easy to see whether several domains are pointing at the same country at the same time.
  • Drill transparency. Many surfaces explain why a place is moving instead of only showing that it is moving.
Can miss
  • News reflects coverage, not events. Attention and on-the-ground reality are related but not identical.
  • Flights depend on route resolution. A weaker route environment means less of the airport truth surface is visible.
  • Maritime is uneven. Coverage, freshness, and baseline maturity vary by region and upstream state.
  • Baselines need time. Newly tracked places and newer modes may still be warming up.
  • No single page is the whole answer. NeoLexx works best when you confirm a signal in its drill and cross-check it against other domains.