Seems like it was started a year ago. I just discovered it now, and am somewhat impressed by how much detail it provides (including Air Pollution / Air Quality Index).
So of course I filed my ponies-on-rainbows enhancement request to suggest an interactive stacked graphs representation (like a certain website I use, shown below)… 🤞👀
Yikes. Filming from the inside of a Cat 5 hurricane. Plus footage of the wind as the front and rear walls of the eye pass. As well as the damage caused.
Amazing 23 minute record of Hurricane Dorian hitting the Bahamas in 2019.
The weather is doing some funny stuff. Only a few days ago it was 24°C. This morning it was 4°C, and my breath was condensating. That's June in the Highlands.
Damaging gusts of 60-70 mph will be possible this afternoon/evening across western Oklahoma and the eastern Texas Panhandle.Isolated wind damage will be possible this afternoon from eastern New York into the Carolinas, and isolated wind damage/hail may also occur across the central/east central Florida peninsula.Please stay weather aware. #WeatherAwareDay#weather#wx#SPC#SevereWeather
Strong storms are possible across portions of the Upper Midwest, Great Lakes, Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, and Texas Coastal Plain to the southern Mississippi.
Please stay weather aware. #WeatherAwareDay#weather#wx#SPC#SevereWeather
An entirely new way to forecast the weather, using artificial intelligence, is sending “shockwaves through the field of meteorology." The results are said to be already outperforming traditional, physics-based models on tasks like hurricane forecasting, reports @arstechnica.
The secret to this success? Good data. With enormous data sets of in-depth weather information going all the way back to 1940, there is plenty of information to help AI learn, understand and predict weather patterns. What could this mean for the future of weather reporting? Here’s more.