When something stops working online, the cause is rarely where you're looking. timx.ai watches the upstream layers — power grids, weather, cloud platforms, networks — and traces what's affecting what, so you can tell whether the problem is your provider, the infrastructure they depend on, or something local to you.
View live statusWildfire — Santa Rosa Island, CA is affecting infrastructure that Cloudflare depends on — Wildfire-driven power loss and fiber cuts can degrade West Coast CDN edge nodes. Cloudflare is currently reporting "Workers AI experiencing degraded availability in some models" (Minor), whi...
Live demand and reserve margins across major U.S. grid operators (PJM, ERCOT, CAISO). When demand runs hot, data centers and telecom in that region face elevated risk.
Active alerts from the National Weather Service. Severe weather near critical infrastructure is one of the most common root causes of outages.
Official status feeds from cloud, AI, and SaaS platforms. When several services on the same cloud platform fail at once, the platform itself is the likely cause.
Most status pages tell you a service is having problems. timx.ai tries to tell you why. Every signal — a grid stressed past forecast, a hurricane warning, three providers on AWS degrading together — gets matched against a dependency map. When a real upstream cause matches a downstream effect, it shows up as a correlated event with a confidence rating, so you can judge for yourself.
Sources are tagged by how authoritative they are: official APIs from the providers themselves, open public feeds, or unofficial signals. Nothing is presented as more certain than it actually is.