Comparison

“Can’t I just ask a generic AI if I should worry?”

You can — and you’ll get a thoughtful, generic answer that changes every time you ask, grounded in nothing in particular. That is the difference in one sentence: any AI can give you an answer; ours has to show which sensor it came from.

The same intelligence, bolted to eleven live sensors

The Macro Lens “Should I worry?” tool uses the same class of AI you’d reach for on your own — but it is bolted to a deterministic engine that reads eleven market sensors every morning from free public data. Every answer traces to the engine’s actual reading, today, through one published framework, with decades of base rates behind it. The AI carries the voice; the engine carries the analytical weight, and the AI is structurally forbidden from predicting or contradicting it.

Why grounding beats fluency

A general assistant is fluent but unanchored: ask twice and you may get two different answers, neither reproducible, neither tied to a stated method. Macro Lens is the opposite — the read is the same whether you ask it or reproduce it yourself, and it can say “no regime changes today” on the quiet days, which is what earns it the right to be believed on the day something does change.

Try the grounded version.

Paste a headline or a market question and get a calm, calibrated read tied to today’s sensors.

Should I worry? →