โMay-16-2015 04:38 PM
โJul-02-2015 02:08 AM
โJul-01-2015 05:22 PM
โJun-30-2015 07:24 PM
โJun-30-2015 06:28 PM
SCVJeff wrote:westernrvparkowner wrote:
I can beat 65% accuracy by looking up at that thing called the sky. And can get pretty close to 100% of that lightning thing by listing to something called "thunder". Even more significant is both of them are free and don't require carrying around an electronic gadget.
Give us a call if you're ever curious what you will look up and see in 2 hours... ๐
โJun-30-2015 12:58 PM
cmcdar wrote:SCVJeff wrote:Dutch_12078 wrote:Thats the one. It just sits in the background and works
I've found "Weather Radio" to be a good app for storm warnings, etc. It uses the phone's GPS to localize the warnings to your location, or you can choose from multiple saved locations. Many alert setting options, and it's available for both Android and iOS phones. The Android version is $4.99 and well worth it in my opinion.
Does this require your smartphone to be connected to wifi or 3/4g?YES. IF YOU HAVE INCOMING DATA, IT WILL WORK
I will be on the road for a few months. It would be nice to find a weather radio to automatically scan for reception rather than wait to be programmed.YOU CAN PROGRAM THEM TO ALERT ALL 'FIPS' CODES AND SIMPLY NOT PROGRAM YOUR LOCAL AREA. NOT A BAD IDEA WHEN MOVING AT 70MPH. IF YOU ARE IN RANGE OF AN NWS TRANSMITTER, THE RADIO WILL WAKE UP AND ALERT YOU TO WHATEVER WARNINGS IT'S CARRYING AT THE TIME
Ideally, an app that would send warnings (depending on my location) as I drive. ie Tornado Warnings.THERE ARE MANY THAT WILL DO THAT, STORM DOESN'T LOOK LIKE ITS ONE OF THEM (STILL PLAYING). WEATHER RADIO IS A FOLLOW-ME APP
Best of all worlds would be to have weather alerts over my GPS Radio. I know this is available in some units, just not mine.GPS DOESN'T HAVE A "RADIO", BUT SEVERAL IN-CAR GPS RECEIVERS HAVE SUBSCRIPTION WEATHER RADAR OVERLAYS FED VIA SATELLITE RADIO. I LET MINE LAPSE. THE IPHONE IS WAY BETTER AND FASTER. HAVEN'T SEEN ONE THAT DOES TORNADOES (BUT ALSO DON'T LIVE IN TORNADO COUNTRY.
Right now I would settle for a regular weather radio that will just scan to find a local station.PS _ I am right now replacing a Radio Shack (piece of crap) that has just decided not to work.SEE UP
Thanks,
Caryl
โJun-30-2015 11:55 AM
SCVJeff wrote:Dutch_12078 wrote:Thats the one. It just sits in the background and works
I've found "Weather Radio" to be a good app for storm warnings, etc. It uses the phone's GPS to localize the warnings to your location, or you can choose from multiple saved locations. Many alert setting options, and it's available for both Android and iOS phones. The Android version is $4.99 and well worth it in my opinion.
โMay-19-2015 06:35 PM
mgirardo wrote:
Just an FYI Weather Underground's Storm App is only available on the iPhone and iPad, it is not available on Android.
DarkSky is also only available on the iPhone and iPad, not on Android.
-Michael
โMay-19-2015 06:20 PM
โMay-19-2015 06:11 PM
Dutch_12078 wrote:Thats the one. It just sits in the background and works
I've found "Weather Radio" to be a good app for storm warnings, etc. It uses the phone's GPS to localize the warnings to your location, or you can choose from multiple saved locations. Many alert setting options, and it's available for both Android and iOS phones. The Android version is $4.99 and well worth it in my opinion.
โMay-19-2015 03:04 PM
fj12ryder wrote:
It seems to me that if it is that easy the local weather forecasters should be able to do a better job than what they actually do. Maybe you should offer to do their job for them. ๐
โMay-19-2015 07:03 AM
fj12ryder wrote:It's much more difficult for local weather forecasters to do their job than it is for an app to tell me if it will rain on my location in the next ten minutes and how long that rain will last.
It seems to me that if it is that easy the local weather forecasters should be able to do a better job than what they actually do. Maybe you should offer to do their job for them. ๐
โMay-19-2015 07:00 AM
โMay-19-2015 06:11 AM
โMay-19-2015 04:58 AM
fj12ryder wrote:You can't predict the weather with absolutes. We talk about weather in terms of probabilities. If the weather forecast calls for a 60% chance of scattered showers during the day, that's not very useful information to me.
But you're assuming that the weather apps are any more accurate than the weather people putting them out there. And so far weather forecasting is right up there with water witching, and reading tea leaves as far as accuracy is concerned.
I mean I can see you check out your apps and they say a big storm is on the way, so you cancel your climb, hike, cookout, whatever. Then it's "Oops, sorry we were wrong, the storm fizzled out."
โMay-19-2015 04:30 AM
fj12ryder wrote:Laman wrote:But you're assuming that the weather apps are any more accurate than the weather people putting them out there. And so far weather forecasting is right up there with water witching, and reading tea leaves as far as accuracy is concerned.
The ability to see weather coming at you to me is invaluable. Ever go out hiking or biking and have a thunderstorm catch you, to late to look up! I know when I was farming I would have given lots of money to know what kind and intensity of weather was approaching, that would have literally over the years saved me a great deal of money and time.
To me the weather apps. and campgrounds finding apps. alone justify the cost of the smart phones and plans
I mean I can see you check out your apps and they say a big storm is on the way, so you cancel your climb, hike, cookout, whatever. Then it's "Oops, sorry we were wrong, the storm fizzled out."