Why weather apps may not be the best bet during winter storms

That snowflake icon on your smartphone app might be quick and handy — it just might not be as accurate as a human when the weather gets rough. Experts say that’s especially important during winter storms like the one forecasted to smack the eastern U.S. with a mix of heavy snow, treacherous ice and subzero temperatures. The popular Weather Channel app, for example, uses artificial intelligence to analyze everything from computer models to citizen weather reports. But humans always have the last word. Most experts say the best place to get the most accurate forecast is still probably local television meteorologists.

AP News
Bar graph or strictly numerical types of forecasts are deceiving, because it’s not clear when the high or low temperatures actually occur! In reality, it will be very warm Saturday afternoon and the temps will plummet throughout Sunday until Monday morning. Yes, the high on Sunday will be 53°, but that will occur at midnight. 😖 #Weather #WeatherApps #SCwx #GreenvilleSC

Okay. I'm needing suggestions for a good indie Android weather app. Before anyone goes crazy, it's for my second phone. 😀

#android #apps #weatherapps

Many who know me know that I have a thing for #WeatherApps. I have many for various reasons. For instance, the #StormShieldApp for #iOS I have solely for its lightning alerts which cost $0.99 a month. They were reliable and thus I kept the app even though it was by and large an #Inaccessible mess when using #VoiceOver. However, now the price is about to rise to $4.99 a month and they gave users or at least this user less than a month's notice. So it's buh bye to this one. It makes me even more grateful to the developer of #WeatherGods not only for his implementation and offering of a subscription that includes Lightning alerts but also for his commitment to #Accessibility throughout the whole of his app. So, if lightning alerts are important to you, you might wish to consider supporting Weather Gods and its developer. I have no afiliation beyond being a happy user.
So, since I was having this chat with friends about extended forecasts in #WeatherApps #WXApps it gave me a chance to revisit some in my current rotation and some who've lost their standing to be so. I'm glad to report that the #Wunderground app has decent #Accessibility when using #VoiceOver. By contrast The #WeatherChannel app has degraded as their daily forecasts don't read well at all. And the worst offender is still #WeatherBug which used to be a very #Accessible app but now hardly anything on the screen reads well with #Voiceover at all. Shameful really because it used to be such a good app.

Weather tracking has become vital in some areas of the country. Learn why meteorologists say to ditch the weather apps and use the right website instead.

#WeatherTracking #WeatherApps https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/beware-the-weather-apps-how-meteorologists-gauge-california-s-heat/ar-BB1pubs0

MSN

Reading Time: 2 minutes

For five years it was sunny almost every day in Switzerland. It was sunny so often that the water tables declined and village fountains dried up, as did fields. Clouds of dust could be seen rising when tractors worked the fields. It’s because of this excellent weather, for years in a row, that I stopped looking at weather apps.

Now, weather is interesting again. Two or three weeks ago Geneva flooded. A few days ago Zermatt flooded, and, now Morges has flooded too. So many places are flooding. This is due to weather weirding on one side, but also climate change on the other. With more heat the clouds can store more water, and when they meet a cold front a deluge may ensue.

The other issue is that villages are replacing villas with apartment buildings. Where there was grass, and gardens, and trees, you have tarmac and cement. The result is that water can no longer drain into the soil. It runs down hill until it finds basements, garages and other places.

it flooded the streets of Morges yesterday, and parkings in Geneva a few weeks ago, and the streets of Zermatt just a few days ago. Because of the droughts people forgot that water needs to be able to flee, to go into empty fields, and rivers, and gardens.

A tree captures water before it hits the ground. A few weeks ago I was hiking in a forest and the trees kept us dry. It might have been raining but the leaf canopy kept us dry.

If you remove trees you increase not only the speed with which rain hits the ground but also the speed at which it runs off from the ground. That runoff looks like nothing higher up but once it hits Morges, or Geneva, it floods.

Gardens with trees also help to slow down the flow of water. A garden can absorb rain, and if it can’t absord it then puddles form. Trees suck up some of that moisture and store it. The rain might be heavy but it has plenty of places where it can be buffered.

In contrast, as villages replace every green space in villages with apartments and tarmac parkings, so the opportunity for rain to flee, to be absorbed is gone. That’s when flooding occurs. That’s when underground parkings and ground floors flood.

## And Finally

Although it is frustrating to have rain forecast for every weekend this summer it is nice to see how nature is thriving, thanks to the rain. For years nature was on survival mode. I noticed that the dirt under an underpass has now been replaced with nature thriving. Nature has really benefitted from all the rain that has fallen this year.

https://www.main-vision.com/richard/blog/watching-the-weather-again/

#heat #rain #sun #weather #weatherApps #weatherForecast

Watching the Weather Again

For five years it was sunny almost every day in Switzerland. It was sunny so often that the water tables declined and village fountains dried up, as did fields. Clouds of dust could be seen rising …

Richard's blog

Been testing a couple of iPhone #WeatherApps head to head just for myself. Saw something in the #Apple app I never saw before. It told me the rain would stop in about 12 minutes, and it was more or less right!

The other app had some other inaccurate calls the Apple #Weather app got right at home and during travel…

#Impressed - whatever else you think of Apple, this is a new level of awesome, for people who live where the weather actually changes a lot.

Hello makers of #weatherapps:
Instead of making us Americans choose between F and C, why not let us display both side by side?
That's how you help Americans adapt to #metric and maybe eventually you won't have to offer a choice.
#foss #apps #developers #UX
‘We used to check every day, now it’s every minute’: how we got addicted to weather apps
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jul/17/weather-apps-addiction-climate-crisis-anxiety?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other
#WeatherApps
‘We used to check every day, now it’s every minute’: how we got addicted to weather apps

As unprecedented weather leads to increasing climate anxiety, there’s a raft of different apps catering for every kind of forecast

The Guardian