NOAA Adopts New Net Policy 204
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has adopted a
new policy which applies to provision of all National Weather Service environmental information, including forecasts, warnings, and observations. In June,
/. reported that NOAA was taking comments on the proposed policy.
Hundreds of Slashdotters responded. And it made a difference: NOAA will make its data and products available in internet-accessible, vendor-neutral form and will use other dissemination technologies, e.g. satellite broadcast, NOAA Weather Radio, and wireless, as appropriate. Congrats to the Slash community for making a difference and helping to set US Govt policy.
free weatherbug? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:5, Informative)
actually... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:actually... (Score:2)
Re:actually... (Score:2)
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2)
Here's a link: http://forecastfox.mozdev.org/ [mozdev.org]
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:5, Informative)
TWC is actually a huge supporter of open source software, to the point of providing full time employment for a FreeBSD kernel developer. We've directly funded some other open source projects too, and try to give back in lots of ways.
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2)
Of course, there is no guarantee that it won't happen in the future.
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2)
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2)
"Would you like to buy some MSPlywood to protect your Windows installations?"
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2)
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2)
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2, Interesting)
http://forecastfox.mozdev.org/ [mozdev.org]
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:3, Interesting)
spawn telnet rainmaker.wunderground.com
expect "Press Return to continue:"
send "\n"
send "bdr\n" # replace with your own 3-letter city code
expect "Press Return to continue"
send_user "\n"
exit
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2)
http://www.wx.com/radar_servlet.cfm?zip=<ZIP>&si ze =0
or the URL rewritten by the server to include local city names at image coordinates:
http://www.wx.com:9030/javaimg/servlet/Radar?hou r= <GMT>&cell=<MAP-CELL>&dir=1&size=0&citycount=3&cit y3=New%20Haven&x3=220&y3=117&city2=Hartford&x2=237 &y2=38&city1=Bridgeport&x1=202&y1= 129
The smallest image is 300x400pxls, but t
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2)
Is very browser/os independant, works even if im not at home/my computer and s
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2)
I was approached a while ago about building a small module for a website to pull in temperature and humidity (factors which affect concrete drying times, apparently). My geek nature kicked in and I hunted down a means for obtaining all the weather info without having to rip off a weather.com or similar site.
I was able to FTP to NOAA servers for free/anonymous, download the most recent file (once an hour is all I bothered with), and parse it into a database.
Re:free weatherbug? (Score:2)
There's my weatherbug. Honestly, what does weatherbug have to offer that a simple bookmark in mozilla doesn't, besides another potential problem for your computer?
Re:free weatherbug its called Weather Watcher (Score:2)
no spyware, no popups, no ads, no cost. Just desktop weather.
Good stuff! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Good stuff! (Score:4, Funny)
The Weather Machine (Score:2)
Does anyone else remember Cobra's Weather Machine? I blame the resurgence of Cobra for the four hurricanes that smacked Florida this summer. Crazy environmentalists are paying him and he's using our new culture of fear to make a name for himself again.
Re:Good stuff! (Score:2)
The system works!!! (Score:5, Informative)
I'm happy because my concerns were addressed. I was afraid that the proposed policy was going to give commercial interests the ability to reqeust the NOAA discontinue a service without review, meaning that if weather.com didn't like the ability of the NWS to issue point forecasts they could behind-the-scenes ask for it to be ended. The modified policy now states they will "Establish... orderly processes for seeking input and suggestions to create, modify, or discontinue products and services".
It's a cool feeling to be a part of a process that actually seems to have worked to our advantage for a change.
Re:The system works!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
The NWS/Accu-Trak/TWC reports are what the weather puppets on TV/Radio read anyways. Not too many actually bother trying to interpret things on their own anymore. Tom Skilling @ WGN comes to mind.
If you remember wx.purdue.edu in the old days, this was probably the most awesome weather information site available (also had wx.washington.edu, etc.). Well, the atmospheric sciences people I think got tired of hosting these public wx sites ($$$), and they went non-public in the DotCom days, but now it's in a commercial form of wxunderground.com.
Weather.com's stuff just sucks.
Re:The system works!!! (Score:5, Informative)
Here's the site [noaa.gov] I visit every day. Take a look at things like the "Area Forecast Discussions." While they're a bit cryptic to read, they give you a better picture than the limited local forecast.
Re:The system works!!! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:The system works!!! (Score:2)
Re:The system works!!! (Score:2)
NOAA data is excellent, I'll agree with that... Only having pulled tons of it for nationwide map display, and of course I'd love to just have a nice GIS layer of every piece, but what's there is sweet enough.
Re:The system works!!! (Score:2)
Well, not any that really counts anyway.
Re:The system works!!! (Score:2)
Sure ways to tell (Score:2)
It's often fairly easy to distinguish the airheads from meteorologists on the news.
On a day when severe weather is expected, watch closely. If the weatherperson is clearly excited but trying not to sound too excited (since people hit by the storms might take offense), you're watching a meteorologist or at least a genuine weather geek. Otherwise, they'e likely just reading a report without understanding what it really means.
Bonus points if they use appropriate modes of the nexrad to point out storm featu
Tom Skilling @ WGN (Score:2)
We were (are?) such geeks.
slashdot.com? (Score:2)
Re:The system works!!! (Score:2)
Re:The system works!!! (Score:2)
Government not a lost cause yet (Score:4, Insightful)
Government not a lost cause yet-Poster. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Government not a lost cause yet (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Government not a lost cause yet (Score:2)
Re:Government not a lost cause yet (Score:2)
Re:Government not a lost cause yet (Score:2)
In a lot of ways, Democracy is what we all make of it. Which, when you look at the state of it in much of the West, is actually pretty sad.
Well... (Score:4, Insightful)
Least they listen every once in a while. Still, it's good to see that at least ONE agency remembers that the people are supposed to run the government, not the other way around.
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Agreed. Or, at the very least, they realize that when it comes to the weather, information literally saves lives. Remember, the guys at NOAA are largely scientists out for one cause: protecting life and property. It's no accident that NOAA is part of the Department of Commerce...
In any case, this is a prety major victory worthy of celebration!
Re:Well... (Score:2)
(*) Government is the organization which holds the unique right to initiate force as a means to an end; anyone else who does so is a criminal. That is the only absolute, universal way to define government.
So no, the people cannot logically "run" the government. At best, they can influence government's decisions on where, wh
Re:Well... (Score:2)
The Founding Fathers, by the definition of the laws at the time, were criminals. Breaking the law does not necessarily mean that what you are doing is ethically wrong, especially if the law is oppressive. What most governments who decide that they can ignore the people find is that the people, once sufficiently pissed off, can quite well apply force right back, whether it's legal or not.
Re:Well... (Score:2)
I'd be the first to agree with that. Morality and law are completely seperate and distinct concepts which rarely intersect. The only unambiguous, consistent, and universal way to define morality is in terms of human interaction between two or more parties, by the principle of non-aggression.
Hundreds (Score:2, Interesting)
As long as you're searching... (Score:2)
NOAA's electronic survival (Score:5, Funny)
Re:NOAA's electronic survival (Score:2)
Thank you all for your contributions! (Score:2, Interesting)
--- Begin ---
Hi there Slashdot, yes, I'm a total weather freak and as such I was really glad to help serve you guys and field your comments, questions, and complaints.
What really hit home for me was how passionate many of you are for our services and that they be delivered in an open, fair medium. As technology advances, some of us tend to go for the first choice, and Microsoft, Oracle, and other closed-source larg
Amerstam Vallon is a troll... read for more. (Score:5, Informative)
Ken Jennings was my roommate freshman year at Brigham Young University
I worked for NASA for 8 years straight out of MIT undergrad.
I'm an editor for Tom's Hardware Guide
I worked for a particular company that denied another company a lucrative contract just because that company's CTO had bullied my company's CEO when he was in high school
I have TWO friends who work at Bungie
I work on LAMP software and deploy to customer's websites.
I obtained a preview release [of GIMP 2.0]
Forgive me for being skeptical, but I have trouble believing all that. A child of the post pointed to above says that the parent poster is a known troll, and a check of his recent comments shows many rated troll.
So perhaps this shouldn't be 5, Interesting?
Ok, now what about (Score:4, Funny)
Can we get some action on that?
Re:Ok, now what about (Score:2)
See? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:See? (Score:2)
Just wait until NOAA has weather control figured out.
We'll see how long... (Score:4, Insightful)
All it will take is someone from TWC or some of the other commercial repackagers of NWS information who happens to have been a good RNC/TeamW contributor to put a whisper in Karl Rove's ear that NOAA is out of line here, that those commie freeniks should have to pay for the information, and it will then fall under some blanket of the US PATRIOT Act, National Security, DMCA, etc., so that their handle on the data from NOAA/NWS is impenetrable for the untermenschen (ie., the rest of us).
Re:We'll see how long... (Score:2)
Someone here at
just how long NOAA will hold this position.
In today's political climate, it is not
very difficult to imagine that all that
taxpayer-funded weather forcasting (and
research) will wind up being commercialized,
and "public" data being held hostage to
secrecy and the DMCA (under the guise of
"national security"). As if anyone with
a barometer, a wet bulb, and a window
wouldn't eventually figure out the weather.
Re:We'll see how long... (Score:2)
NOAA & EAS (Score:5, Informative)
Warning sirens are only intended to notify people outdoors, and TVs and radios are only useful if you are awake, the unit is on and you are within earshot and paying attention at the time.
When NOAA or an emergency management agency (NOAA allows them to utilize the system without running the transmissions by them first) sends out a warning message, it is proceeded by what sounds like intermittent static. In fact, the system is sending out a burst of number sequences that are decoded by SAME equipped radios that compare the number sequence to that which the user has previously entered. If they do not match, the radio ignores the message, if they do match however, a generally ear-piercing alarm sounds while the radio interprets the alert code and displays the corresponding text message before the computer voice announcement (or real person if the situation warrants it) from the NOAA station begins to broadcast. The process takes about 10 seconds (this is to give you a chance to get closer to the radio before the voice warning begins).
Here is a complete list of all of the emergency codes [weather.gov]
They are not as cheap as a clock radio, but they are worth every penny. I'm still astonished when I come across people who live in tornado-prone areas who don't buy them despite their financial ability to do so and their fear of dangerous weather.
Re:NOAA & EAS (Score:2)
Luckily noone died in that tornado, but imagine my fright as a small child running inside not knowing what that thing roaring up the road was... On the plus side, I have become a hardcore weather nerd as a result, even a s
Re:NOAA & EAS (Score:2)
Re:NOAA & EAS (Score:2)
You're the guy without a shirt I keep seeing on Cops, right?
Voobah, voobah, voobah, ping! (Score:2, Funny)
You talkin' to me?
It's Slashdot, NOAA.
Riiiiiiiiiiiight! Who is this. .
KFG
Re:Voobah, voobah, voobah, ping! (Score:3, Funny)
Riiiight . . . What's a first post?
Never mind, NOAA. I want you to go out into the world and collect a cluster of beowulfs, and load them up two by two.
Riiiight . . . am I on JenniCam? How come you want me to do all these weird things?
I'm going to destroy the world.
Riiiight . . . how you gonna do it?
I'm going to post the URL on the front page of Slashdot, and crap-flood 'em all right out.
Riiiight . . .
Now.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Now.... (Score:2)
great, but how about distribution? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:great, but how about distribution? (Score:2)
Every time I call in, no matter how minor the event, they are always appreciative. The greater the density of people who call in, the more accurate the forecast, and the more warning time in a severe weather event.
GREAT!! Who do we THANK?! (Score:4, Interesting)
I missed this story and acting on it, but if someone with some political savvy could direct myself and others to the people who listened (and those who didn't) to
Re:GREAT!! Who do we THANK?! (Score:2)
Please everyone, take the time to write out a nice sincere thank you note. Try to stay away from such negativites as "Thanks for not being an just another government agency" and steer more towards "We appreciate your willingness to disseminate this information."
*AA (Score:2, Funny)
Say "NO!" to *AA!
Already been happening (Score:2)
Has been internet accessible for years http://www.noaa.gov/ [noaa.gov], and if you crawl around enough you can find where they put the raw data feeds and make an app that reads them (seem to be the same ones that go to the automated 'voices' that broadcast NOAA Weather Radio, yes, the Weather Radio network
Well in touch with latest technology... (Score:3, Informative)
Relevance of Slashdot (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Relevance of Slashdot (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually that comment is almost difficult to miss, considering that it appears no less than SIXTY FOUR TIMES! Accuweather engaged in a spam campaign.
They apparently gave their employees a form letter to send in. The form letter appears to have been minorly revised from the initial comment to the final round of submissions, but the letter remains essentially intact. Virtually all sumbmitted the form letter intact, I think only one or two submitters bothered to add on a personal note. A number of them even comically wound up copy/pasting it with ">" at the beginning of each line, as email commonly does when quoting. Chuckle.
It first appears in comment 227. It then appears as comments: 1120 1211 1213 1215 1217 1219 1220 1223 1224 1225 1226 1227 1229 1230 1231 1232 1235 1236 1237 1286 1307 1322 1334 1336 1339 1340 1341 1344 1346 1347 1348 1349 1352 1353 1355 1361 1367 1368 1369 1371 1372 1373 1390 1399 1401 1403 1409 1411 1411 1412 1414 1417 1420 1422 1428 1451 1454 1455 1458 1459 1464 1565 1469.
Most of them are officially signes with an "AccuWeather employee" tag, but undoubtedly every single one derives for AccuWeather.
As far as I can see their only arguments are
(1) they want the old policy to remain
(which isn't really a reason to retain the old policy)
(2) The new policy will "disadvantage the American public" because "It can negatively impact job growth and corporate stability".
I would say "job growth" is a bad thing and harmful to the economy when it is accomplished through supression of information and duplication of work.
Nor is "corporate stability" itself a valid goal. Business live and die on actually satisying unmet the needs of the public. You do not artifically create or maintain an "unmet need" restricting existing publicly funded information. If Accuweather wants the government out of the "weather business", then fine, they should be denied any government funded, government created, or gorventment gathered information as well. Let AccuWeather launch their own satallites and operate countless ground stations themselves.
The increased availablility of information information increases the opportunities for new businesses to crop up and utilize that information and to add value to that information. Corporate instability is a good thing, survival of the fittest constantly struggling to actually fulfill NEEDED work, rather than surpression to artificially create a need.
-
As a weather nerd... (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, as a trained weather spotter, I have been in contact with my local weather service office (KPUB) about this issue and they completely agree that the information be as accessible as possible.
Chalk one up for us!
Thank you NOAA (Score:3, Informative)
Thank you NOAA, for making the right decision for everyone on the internet, not just those that fund you.
Credit should go... (Score:3, Insightful)
"Mission connection: NOAA's information services will support the NOAA mission. As a government agency, NOAA recognizes its core responsibility to protect life and property."
The responsibility to protect life and property trumps all other concerns. Providing for the security of citizens is the primary responsibility of government. Supplying the data only to commercial entities would be improper delegation of that responsibility.
33% of response were from Slashdot (Score:5, Funny)
63 - In Soviet Russia the weather updates you.
19 - Notices that this service is already provided by Goatse.cx
3 - Requests to add a feature that notifies you anytime Natalie Portman comes within 50 meters of hot grits.
16 - Pondering what a beowulf cluster of these might be like.
48 - Blasting the NOAA because Microsoft is secretly behind bad weather.
27 - Claimed the request was a dupe and cited existing services provided by the NOAA.
16 - Only old Koreans use the weather.
19 - Claims that "1 0wnz d4 w34th3r cuz 1m s0 133t"
193 - Users suggesting the NOAA needs to rely on perl, python, BSD, Linux, MySQL, PHP, emacs, vi, haskell, or ruby for all future development efforts.
1 - Comment suggesting the weather should be properly called GNU/Weather (thanks RMS!)
11 - Requested a change for notices about clear sunny days. The new notice will read, "Nothing to see here. Move along."
13 - Requesting that the raw weather data and weather forcasting software be sent as part of an ebuild that they could emerge and compile the report anytime they wanted, because they've got their Gentoo system totally tweaked out for this type of application.
27 - Asked for help getting WeatherBug to work correctly on Linux w/ Wine.
9 - Posts about how Netcraft had confirmed it, weather is dead.
1 - Comment with made up statistics about how important changing was.
1 - Comment with made up statistics about how important not changing was.
32 - EA employees asked for pictures, b/c they've never seen the light of day, a blue sky or snow lit by daylight.
1 - Comment that read...
Quite an impact.
congrats /.ers for your next assignment.... (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, yeah the weather. I bike to work in new england: a very detailed forcast is critical to my saftey so this little victory is a serious win from my perspective. I already paid taxes for this data...be damned if I'll pay twice for it.
Forget Weather Roach (Score:2)
No ads, no spyware, just works, and works well.
will NOAA survive an all-Republican government? (Score:2)
I live near the the Boulder UCAR/NCAR/NOAA centers. Every year in recent years their proposed fudning gets whacked 25-50%, only to be restored last minute. But the restoration may not c
Graphics freezing my computers (Score:2)
Thanks NOAA (Score:3, Insightful)
And thanks to NOAA for being receptive to non-corporate opinions.
Re:Fight Club. (Score:2, Insightful)
I like Chuck Palahniuk as much as the next burnt-out twenty-something office worker, but like Nietzsche, not everything he writes is an endorsement of what comes out of his pen, or for that matter, the gospel truth.
YLFI,a beautiful and unique snowflake
Re:Just think, if we had disposable millions (Score:2)
You misspelt "democracy"
Re:It frightens me, sometimes (Score:3, Interesting)
It's open, sure, but you can say the same about PDF.
Re:It frightens me, sometimes (Score:2)
The spec on MS site is for MSs IMPLEMENTATION.
Sorta like PDF, only completely different.
I lamely googled for a link, but RTF is sort of a common search result...
Re:It frightens me, sometimes (Score:2)
Re:It frightens me, sometimes (Score:2)
Re:It frightens me, sometimes (Score:2)
RTF is a proprietary format.
It's open, sure, but you can say the same about PDF
This thread has nothing to do with the openess of RTF, but correcting the claims that RTF isn't proprietary (since it is).
Re:It frightens me, sometimes (Score:2, Insightful)
There are plenty of ISO and ANSI standards which are patent-encumbered. And you usually have to pay money to get access to the standards documents.
Non-proprietary doesn't mean open.
And proprietary doesn't mean non-open.
So what's the point in distinguishing them, then? Not many people care about who created the standard. People do care about if they can implement it for free, and freely.
Re:It frightens me, sometimes (Score:2)
Re:What an achievement. (Score:2)