How MuskPulsar works — tweet counting, live updates, and every chart on the event dashboard.
Counts follow XTracker data for each Polymarket market’s official UTC window. Only posts inside that window are included in the event total.
MuskPulsar refreshes every 60 seconds on live markets. New posts are synced from XTracker and deduplicated in the local archive. Ended markets use a frozen final count.
On live markets, the Event Projection card estimates the final tweet total if the current posting pace continues through the end of the market window.
Each event page links to the matching Polymarket market where you can bet Yes/No on tweet count brackets (live) or review settled results (completed).
The cyan line is the running tweet total from event start up to now, updating hourly as new posts arrive. Optional dashed predict lines (7D, 15D, 30D, and so on, plus Custom) estimate where the count could finish at market close. Each line replays Elon’s recent hourly posting rhythm from the last N days (ending now) across the remaining hours of the event. Toggle lines with the checkboxes above the chart; tooltips may show the Polymarket bracket a projection points to when odds data is available.
A live grid of UTC hours (rows) against calendar days (columns) for this event. Each cell counts tweets in that hour; hotter colors mean more activity. Event (default) includes every day of the market so far. 7D, 15D, and other lookbacks switch to the last N days ending now—useful for comparing recent rhythm to the full event. The Ø column averages each hour across the days shown.
Twenty-four bars—one per UTC hour. Bar length is the average tweets per day at that hour in the selected window. Event mode uses all days of this market so far; lookback modes use the last N days ending now (same windows as predict lines). Peak highlights the busiest hour—when Elon most often posts during the day.
Seven bars for Monday–Sunday (UTC). Each bar is the average tweet count for that weekday in the window: totals on all Mondays (etc.) divided by how many of those weekdays appear. Event mode covers the market so far; lookbacks use the last N days ending now. Peak is the most active weekday—compare with the Hourly Infographic (time of day vs day of week).
How long Elon typically waits between consecutive posts. The bar chart groups gaps into buckets (0–10 min through 6 h+) for the selected window (Event, 7D, 15D, or Custom). The live strip above shows time since the last tweet, the usual average gap in the window, and today’s average (UTC). If today’s gaps are less than half the usual average—with at least two gaps today—a Storm badge flags unusually rapid posting.
The cyan line is the full cumulative tweet count for the finished event—from market open to close. Optional dashed predict lines (7D, 15D, 30D, and so on, plus Custom) replay how each lookback model would have projected the final total using posting patterns from the N days before event start. Compare them to the cyan line to see which historical rhythm came closest. Tooltips may show the Polymarket bracket each line implied when odds data is available.
Every day and UTC hour of the completed event. Each cell is how many tweets landed in that one-hour slot; hotter colors mean more activity. Event (default) spans the full market window. 7D, 15D, and other lookbacks rebuild the grid from the N days immediately before event start—the same windows used for predict lines. The Ø column averages each hour across the days shown.
Twenty-four bars for UTC hours 12 AM–11 PM. Bar length is the average tweets per day at that hour across the selected window. Event mode summarizes the whole market; lookback modes use the pre-event N-day windows. Peak marks the busiest hour—useful for seeing when Elon posted most often during the event period.
Seven bars for Monday–Sunday (UTC). Each bar is the average tweet count for that weekday within the window: all Mondays (or Tuesdays, etc.) divided by how many of those weekdays appear in the range. Event mode covers the full market; lookbacks use the N days before event start. Peak is the most active weekday in that window.
The distribution of pauses between consecutive posts during the event (or a chosen lookback ending at event start). Bars show what share of gaps fell into each bucket: 0–10 min, 10–30 min, 30–60 min, 1–3 h, 3–6 h, 6 h+. The headline stat is the average gap for the selected window. Live “since last tweet” and Storm indicators are not shown—the market is over.