The stock chart, off decaf.
Nine market blocks for inside articles — the in-post chart rebuilt calm, plus the smaller instruments that let a story quote the market without shouting. Same rules as everything else: identity in the legend, judgment in the numbers, one hairline at a time.
The block below replaces today's widget. What changed: the grid mesh is gone (three labeled lines carry the scale), the red "underwater" fill became one quiet tint of the line's own color, ranges are text tabs instead of buttons, nine data cells became a fact ledger, and the whole thing hovers — crosshair with both series quoted.
"Day's range" and "52-week range" as prose rows force the reader to do the math. One rail shows where today sits in the year instantly:
When the SpaceX lockup expires, the exchanges themselves become the trade. ICE −25.4% owns the NYSE listing everyone assumes, while NDAQ +4.2% has quietly won the last three mega-listings. The chip quotes the market mid-sentence without breaking the line — no card, no interruption, price on hover.
Half your stock coverage is really an A-versus-B argument. This block makes the argument visible — normalized performance up top, the deciding facts underneath:
Dell vs. Super Micro: the AI server trade, year to date
ICE reports Q2 before the open
Every block above inherits both color modes, collapses gracefully at 375px, and reserves fixed heights so Raptive units can't shift the layout.