Palm trees and lower heating bills in Chicago? Bikinis and orange blossoms in Duluth? Back in 1958 these miracles were the promise of tomorrow, thanks to the hot new science of weather control
The colossal wind tunnels at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, have been used for decades not only to test the aerodynamism of planes, but also to subject submarines to simulations of turbulence and drag in aquatic environments.
A huge storm, cyclone Phailin (pronounced: phie-lin), is approaching the states of Odisha and Andhra Pradesh on the eastern coast of India and will probably also cause heavy rain in neighboring states. Indian authorities evacuated half a million people over the past few days as predictions about the storm grew more dire.
Get Rain Notifications Using IFTTT
Posted in: Today's ChiliThis article was written on September 05, 2012 by CyberNet.
It’s not a lot of fun when you’re caught outside in a storm without an umbrella, but the awesome If This Then That (IFTTT) service can be used as an advanced warning system for rain and thunderstorms. For those of you not familiar with IFTTT it’s basically a website that is able to tie multiple online services together. For example, you can have any image you’re tagged in on Facebook automatically saved to your Dropbox account. Or you can save any starred Google Reader items to Evernote. It’s a free and unbelievably awesome service that I have come to rely on.
IFTTT is also capable of sending you a notification via email or SMS based on the weather conditions. You can have it send out the weather conditions every morning if that’s what you want, or you can just have it give you alerts when it is about to rain. IFTTT checks the weather condition every 15-minutes, and if it finds that it is raining in your area it can send an email or SMS message so that you’re aware of the impending downpour. Alternatively you can have it push out a notification to you if tomorrow’s forecast calls for rain.
So how do you set these up? If you’re already familiar with IFTTT I’m sure you’ll be able to create “recipes” for these actions in just a few seconds. The good news is that IFTTT also lets users share recipes that have been created so that you don’t have to go through the hassle. Here are some pre-made recipes for getting notifications based on whether it is currently raining or whether it is supposed to rain tomorrow:
- Alert if it is currently raining
- Alert if it is supposed to rain tomorrow
Personally I set up alerts for both situations. I find that the notification about whether it is currently raining gives you about a 10-15 minute heads up which in some situations just isn’t enough. That’s where the daily notification comes in… each night IFTTT will send me an alert if it thinks it is supposed to rain tomorrow based on the forecast. That way I know whether I should grab an umbrella before I walk out the door in the morning.
Want even more weather alerts? IFTTT can handle any of the following conditions:
- Current temperature drops below…
This Trigger monitors your local temperature and fires whenever the temperature drops below the value you provide. - Current temperature rises above…
This Trigger monitors your local temperature and fires whenever the temperature rises above the value you provide. - Current condition changes to…
This Trigger monitors changes in the current weather condition. When one of those conditions is met the Trigger fires. Currently only these simple conditions are supported: Rain, Snow, Cloudy, Clear. - Tomorrow’s low drops below…
This Trigger fires every time tomorrow’s forecasted low temperature drops below a value you provide. - Tomorrow’s high rises above…
This Trigger fires every time tomorrow’s forecasted high temperature rises above a value you provide. - Tomorrow’s forecast calls for…
This Trigger monitors changes in tomorrow’s forecasted weather condition. - Sunrise…
This Trigger fires within 15 minutes of the sunrise in your location. - Sunset…
This Trigger fires within 15 minutes of the sunset in your location. - Wind speed rises above…
This Trigger fires every time the wind speed rises above a value you specify in your location. - Current pollen count rises above…
This Trigger monitors your local pollen levels and fires every time the pollen count rises above the value you provide (1-12).
Copyright © 2013 CyberNetNews.com
All day we’ve been hearing about some terrible storms, and wind, and tornados that are coming for us New Yorkers. But thanks to the folks at EarthCam, we can watch the this horrifying weather come straight at us live from a webcam mounted on the Statue of Liberty. It’s getting dark over our office. Oh my god is the world about to end?
Has anyone ever told you that you’ve always got your head in the clouds? Daydreaming isn’t a bad thing because it stimulates your imagination, just as long as you don’t lose sight of reality.
If people stopped dreaming, they’d stop thinking outside of the box and unusually amazing art installations like Cloud Pink wouldn’t come to be.
Using fabric and digitally imposed images of clouds, Korean creative agency Everyware’s Cloud Pink installation gives people the chance to “touch” clouds and literally stick their heads into them.
The best thing about the installation is that it allows visitors to actually interact with it. The projected clouds can be manipulated by touch, so you can move and generate clouds on its digital canvas. Check it out in action in the video below:
[via TAXI]
News alert! The world is going to get hotter. NASA combined dozens of climate models from around the world to estimate temperature and precipitation patterns for the next 87 years. That’ll get us right to the year 2100.
On Friday the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change put its collective foot down
Because we’re all usually so wrapped up with the weather in our immediate vicinity, it’s easy to forget that, somewhere on the planet, there’s usually a cyclone, depression or tropical storm brewing. Not so this week, though—and this image from NASA shows the Earth’s skies in rare, relative peace.
What’s Your Favorite Weather App?
Posted in: Today's ChiliI live in a city where most people consider the weather to be perfect but I actually think that the weather doesn’t truly exist here. Whatever, it’s nice. But even in the most loveliest, mildest place, the dog days of summer can get pretty unbearable. That’s probably the only time I ever look at the weather app on my phone. And that’s probably the only time I realize how crappy my choice of weather app is.