Actual Weather Services
Not Amazon. Not a region in the console—actual weather, in the sense of what the sky and the grid do to your joules.
What this is
Actual Weather Services is a solar-and-battery-backed chat console: a tiny stack that runs where the sun hits the panels and the inverter meets the battery. The UI borrows the language of cloud consoles on purpose—then undercuts them by tying every response to real energy state, not an abstract availability zone.
Why power is the point
Large language models draw real power. This project makes that visible: when solar is thin, when the pack is low, when compute might go dark—the product is supposed to feel it. That is the opposite of treating inference as weightless compute in someone else's data hall.
What you can do here
Use the Chat panel to talk to the model, Power to read station telemetry (and simulation modes for edge cases), and APIfor how to call the same completions endpoint your browser uses—proxied through this Next.js app, not straight to a host you don't control from the page.
The name
“AWS” here is a wink: the smallest data center, the worst SLA the sun ever wrote, the region code us-sun-1 where outages mean clouds, not routers—unless they do both.