Integrating Weather Reports into a Webserver? 61
meteorologist asks: "I work at a small college (300 students) in a small town (1500 people), and on our website we have a weather section. The problem is that it can only get weather information from a town 40 miles away. There is one local reporting station, but it reports exclusively to weatherbug, which slows down computers, and inevitably leads to spyware infections. How do I go about setting up a weather meter (temperature, humidity, wind velocity, and so forth) so that its results can be integrated into an already established website?"
Google (Score:2, Funny)
Wow amazing! It's like a knowledge index for websites that returns results for stuff you want to know about!
Wireless Weather Rock (Score:5, Funny)
piece of wood stuck in the ground.
If rock is wet: It is raining
If rock is white: It is snowing
If you can only see top half of rock: It is really snowing
If white things are bouncing off side of rock: It is hailing
If you can see shadow of rock: It is sunny
No shadow: It is overcast
If you cannot see rock: It is night time
If rock is slowly swinging back and forth: It is windy
If rock is pulling rope horizontal: It is a hurricane
If rock, rope, and stick are gone: There was a tornado
Re:La Crosse Weather Station + Open2300 + LAMP (Score:4, Funny)
1. Take an old 486 and install weatherbug on it.
2. Setup webacam to take pics off the 486's monitor.
3. Serve webcam pics.
Grump.
Re:Wireless Weather Rock (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Easy Answer! (Score:5, Funny)
Judging by your userid and your post, it looks like you are new to Slashdot and computers in general. Welcome! We're glad you're here. How's your AOL trial working out for you?