Klaxon a livr earthquake map with no back end

Accher 12 points 10 comments May 17, 2026
klaxon.live · View on Hacker News

Discussion Highlights (7 comments)

Accher

I built Klaxon ( https://klaxon.live ) as a hobby project — a single static HTML page that fetches the USGS GeoJSON feed client-side and renders it on a Leaflet map. No backend, no database, no tracking, no ads. It deploys as one file on Netlify. It shows M3.5+ earthquakes (1h/24h/7d), with tectonic plate boundaries overlaid so the spatial pattern is obvious. Popups surface USGS PAGER alert level, MMI, felt reports and tsunami flags when present. For events in Japan it links to JMA, since Japanese users think in shindo intensity rather than magnitude. UI is in English, Japanese and Korean. Deliberately limited: it does not ingest JMA/NOAA directly (CORS + the static-only constraint), it's not an alerting system, and tsunami support is just a filter on USGS's tsunami flag — not wave modelling. It's a situational-awareness map, not a warning service. It's a sibling to an earlier project of mine (an outbreak tracker). Happy to answer questions about the architecture or the deliberate constraints.

Gualdrapo

Wanted to reach the author about the possibility to help translating this to spanish but they made it a bit difficult. The /about page remits you to the /sources page for some reason, and for some other reason the /sources page remits you to hantawatch.net, which seems to be currently down. Oh well.

pluc

So you've built a JSON parser

Retr0id

>open dev tools network tab >backend

vachina

There is a frickin backend

cr125rider

Just because it’s not your backend doesn’t mean there isn’t a backend

AgentMasterRace

The amount of people I see argue on Reddit that you don't even need backends don't know what a backend is. The context is a live sports data app. One guy said just store the data offline and he was dead serious.

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