A self-publishing daily world-affairs briefing — cited primary sources from the UN, EU, defense, and foreign institutions, mapped by region — that updates itself on a schedule. You click the prompt, answer 3-5 plain questions (which regions, how often, where to email), and within one build you get a working, publicly-hosted briefing site already showing real claims pulled live from Synorb — UN press releases and podcasts, European Commission communications, U.S. Department of War releases, and foreign central banks like the Bank of Japan — each card citing its true government/institutional URL. The map and charts render from the same live pull, and the cron is wired so tomorrow's edition publishes itself without you touching anything.
World Desk is a hosted briefing site and scheduled email built from official institutions such as the UN, European Commission, defense agencies, and central banks. The map, charts, and cards should all come from the same cited source set.
Replit supplies the deployment and daily schedule. Synorb supplies the cited primary-source updates so the briefing can publish itself without blurring official sources with generic web content.
No setup to learn. Replit asks a handful of normal-person questions — each with a smart default, so “you pick” always works — then builds it with live Synorb data flowing in.
Smart default: All of it — UN & global bodies, Europe (EU/ECB), U.S. defense & White House, and Asia-Pacific (Japan, India, and foreign central banks)
Smart default: Every weekday morning at 7:00 AM
Smart default: The email you sign in to Replit with (you can add more recipients later)
Smart default: A short briefing up top, then the key cited claims under each item
Smart default: Yes — but always mark web-sourced items as separate from the official-source items
Dark, dense intelligence-desk aesthetic. A full-bleed Leaflet choropleth as the hero with glowing region hotspots, monospace datelines, and region lanes (UN / Europe / Defense / Asia-Pacific) as collapsible columns. Significance shown as a color-coded left border (high=amber, medium=slate, low=muted). Feels like a Bloomberg-terminal-for-geopolitics.
Light, editorial newspaper feel — serif headlines, a printed 'World Desk — [date]' masthead, the briefing as a lead column, claim cards as bylined dispatches each citing its institution and source link, and the choropleth + volume chart as clean inset 'figures.' Reads like a credible daily paper that happens to be 100% primary-sourced.
Card-grid product UI with a sticky filter rail (region, institution, significance, official-vs-web). Top row = KPI tiles (items today, institutions reporting, top region) + the volume-by-institution Chart.js panel; the choropleth sits beside the feed. Built for someone scanning fast and clicking through to sources.
Synorb supplies source-linked institutional updates and citation metadata. Replit hosts the briefing site, stores private credentials as secrets, runs the scheduled edition, renders maps and charts, and sends the email digest.
Credential safetyCredentials stay private behind the app, never in page code. Builders can get a free key from synorb.com/keys when the agent asks.
One paste. Answer the questions. Get a working, source-cited product with live Synorb data.
Every briefing card, map item, and email line should link to the official source returned by Synorb. Any web-only context should be visibly labeled and kept separate from the primary-source feed.
Yes. The build prompt connects Synorb at build time to learn the real data shape, then wires live Synorb data into the running product. You click the prompt, answer 3-5 plain questions (which regions, how often, where to email), and within one build you get a working, publicly-hosted briefing site already showing real claims pulled live from Synorb — UN press releases and podcasts, European Commission communications, U.S. Department of War releases, and foreign central banks like the Bank of Japan — each card citing its true government/institutional URL. The map and charts render from the same live pull, and the cron is wired so tomorrow's edition publishes itself without you touching anything.
Only where they are safe. Synorb supplies source-linked institutional updates and citation metadata. Replit hosts the briefing site, stores private credentials as secrets, runs the scheduled edition, renders maps and charts, and sends the email digest. The public page should never contain credentials, secret names, or browser-visible keys.
Every briefing card, map item, and email line should link to the official source returned by Synorb. Any web-only context should be visibly labeled and kept separate from the primary-source feed.
A real app. Replit builds the product experience, while Synorb supplies the cited source layer. The result should have working UI, real data, source links, and honest empty states rather than a static mockup.
A few plain-English questions, each with a smart default so you can just say 'you pick': Which parts of the world should your daily briefing cover?; How often should a fresh edition publish and email out?; What email address should the briefing be sent to?; How much do you want per topic — just the headline-level takeaways, or the detailed claims behind each item?; When an official source hasn't covered something, may the app add a clearly-labeled web result to fill the gap?.
The same Synorb MCP connects to every major coding agent. Pick yours.
Generate credentials, connect Replit, and ship something with live, cited intelligence.