Content radar
The hardest part of a content programme isn't writing. It's noticing, on the right day, that something is worth writing about. The radar watches your niche and turns movement into drafts.
Anti-cannibalization
The fastest way to lose a ranking is to publish a second page chasing the same intent. The radar reads your sitemap before it drafts anything: what you already cover is skipped, and what sits close to it is handed to the filter as context, so it can angle the piece somewhere new instead.
RSS feeds, Google News queries and YouTube channels. Anything that moves in your niche becomes an input, on the cadence you set.
A model reads each item against your project and asks whether it is worth a page. Most things are not, and it says so.
Before anything becomes a draft, the radar reads what you already published. An exact match is skipped outright; a near-match is flagged to the filter.
Ideas arrive inert in your cockpit. Nothing costs you a credit or a token until you say go.
A YouTube item is fetched with its transcript, so the pipeline works from what was actually said, not from a title.
If a sitemap or a feed is unreachable, the radar keeps working rather than silently dropping your inputs on the floor.