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Originally Posted by Jim from Boston
(Post 19522287)
[FONT=Times New Roman][SIZE=3]Double dittoes. On our Comcast cable service we have a channel (245) called Weatherscan that shows the current temp, wind speed and direction, and Doppler over about a fifty mile radius. So I can pretty precisely decide whether to take the beater bike or the pristine carbon fiber.
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Dark Sky
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Originally Posted by RubeRad
(Post 19522541)
I believe that should be 'your honor'! All the rest of you, I hold you in contempt of my OP!
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Originally Posted by RubeRad
(Post 19522464)
FB, FB, not you too! I don't want an email every morning. (a) I found plenty of daily forecast email services, I said in the OP that a daily forecast email was "too often" (b) I don't check email before I ride (c) I don't want to have to turn on the computer every morning to check email before I ride (d) the same email every day I would quickly condition myself to ignore
I check emails daily while having my AM coffee, so the WU forecast is a zero effort deal. I salute you for your freedom in not having to do a daily email check, but these days that's a rarity. |
Originally Posted by FBinNY
(Post 19522845)
Jeepers, sorry.
I check emails daily while having my AM coffee, so the WU forecast is a zero effort deal. I salute you for your freedom in not having to do a daily email check, but these days that's a rarity. |
I was in the "Whadda I need a tablet/smartphone for?" camp for a long time.
Then I got a cheap tablet and a friend gave me his old iPhone. Now I know what I was missing. This is Texas so it wouldn't do much good to check weather 48 hours in advance. I check before every ride. Takes a few seconds. Apps on a tablet or smartphone are really fast, much quicker and more efficient than checking my desktop or laptop PCs. And the weather apps automagically push alerts for my region. I don't need to configure anything, other than a toggle switch to push alerts or not. You can buy a really good Amazon Kindle Fire for about $40 right now. It's just an Android tablet with Amazon's skin to favor their walled garden approach (a good thing for many folks who aren't tech savvy, like my mom). Runs many useful Amazon-approved apps quickly, and the tablets can run pretty much any Android app with a fairly easy workaround. Regarding the smartphone, I don't even have a data plan for my older iPhone. I just use it to run cycling apps, maps, snap pix and videos when I don't want to carry my full camera kit or a separate P&S camera. But I didn't realize how useful these silly things were until I tried 'em. |
Rain Alerts?
Originally Posted by Jim from Boston
(Post 19522287)
On our Comcast cable service we have a channel (245) called Weatherscan that shows the current temp, wind speed and direction, and Doppler over about a fifty mile radius. So I can pretty precisely decide whether to take the beater bike or the pristine carbon fiber.
Originally Posted by KD5NRH
(Post 19522607)
Geez, the plastic bikes are even water soluble?
In any case, I save time on cleaning...I don't need to clean the pristine CF, and I'm not meticulous about the aluminum beater. :rolleyes: |
Originally Posted by canklecat
(Post 19523151)
This is Texas so it wouldn't do much good to check weather 48 hours in advance. I check before every ride.
And the weather apps automagically push alerts for my region. You can buy a really good Amazon Kindle Fire for about $40 right now. Regarding the smartphone, I don't even have a data plan for my older iPhone. I just use it to run cycling apps, maps, snap pix and videos when I don't want to carry my full camera kit or a separate P&S camera. EDIT: how do you run a cycling app without a data plan? |
Originally Posted by Jim from Boston
(Post 19523205)
Rain Alerts?Well of course not, but the kicked up road grease and oil might dissolve them.
In any case, I save time on cleaning...I don't need to clean the pristine CF, and I'm not meticulous about the aluminum beater. :rolleyes: |
Rain Alerts?
Originally Posted by Jim from Boston
(Post 19522287)
On our Comcast cable service we have a channel (245) called Weatherscan that shows the current temp, wind speed and direction, and Doppler over about a fifty mile radius. So I can pretty precisely decide whether to take the beater bike or the pristine carbon fiber.
Originally Posted by RubeRad
(Post 19523287)
I have a friend who has a CF Scattante which is his beater bike, and a CF Focus which is his good bike.
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I'm in Texas where normally rain comes in squall lines. I use Minutecast on Accuweather. Put in a street address and it will give you a 2 hour forecast. Has worked well for me to pick holes in storms go my 30 minute commute.
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Originally Posted by RubeRad
(Post 19523276)
This is SoCal, so for 99% of rides, it's a waste of time to check before every ride.
I don't want alerts, that's only for severe weather problems like flash flood warnings etc, they don't make alerts for 'just rain'. I have a Kindle Fire, got it from my parents xmas 2014. It came with a $25 gift card for apps from the kindle store, we still have about half of that left. It gets used plenty, mostly the kids playing free games, but most of the time when I pick it up it needs charging or is turned off, and getting to the point where I could check the weather is slower than booting up the desktop which has an SSD. And the kindle would be no help out on a ride, even if I could bring it, which I never would. Also, many Kindle Fire compatible apps are free. Every weather app I use (three or four of 'em) is free, with minimal advertising that isn't intrusive. And with the 2016-2017 Fire tablets it's finally completely compatible with Google Maps and Street View, so you can access the 360 panoramic and scrolling features. Everything works better and faster than the 2014 Fire tablets. They're so cheap now you could stash one away just for yourself so it's always ready when you are. Set a PIN so the kids can't use your tablet. But if your PC is really fast, sure, the tablet might not offer any advantage over the tablet. I use so much security stuff on my PCs it always takes longer to fire up than the tablets. But I don't use the tablets for anything that requires security so I don't even use PINs on a couple of them. Everything that might be a security risk is disabled and does require a PIN or password to access, such as making purchases from Amazon. No thanks. I have a flip phone I barely ever use. I have a camera I barely ever use. Once in a blue moon I think 'wouldn't it be nice to have a gps-enabled map right now', but not often enough to be worth the drain on my life that it would be to live inside a smartphone all the time. I know me, and I would be playing games and browsing the internet constantly. EDIT: how do you run a cycling app without a data plan? I don't always share my ride info to social media, including Strava (which is its own social media community). Some stuff I record only for my own reference, such as short repeat routes on hilly segments just to build strength and stamina. But I enjoy sharing routes with real-life local friends. Helps to explore new rides with feedback about road and traffic conditions from folks who are at my fitness level and speed, around 12-15 mph average. And I know to avoid some routes that I'm not fast enough or fit enough to tackle safely. |
Originally Posted by flangehead
(Post 19523872)
I'm in Texas where normally rain comes in squall lines. I use Minutecast on Accuweather. Put in a street address and it will give you a 2 hour forecast. Has worked well for me to pick holes in storms go my 30 minute commute.
I'm on the west side of Fort Worth. We're in a peculiar geographic mini-region where most of the worst weather goes around us. One of the quirks of Texas is the wind pattern sweeping down from the north or up from the south that follows the terrain closely. After awhile you can pretty well predict which incoming storms are likely to hit us and which are likely to go around or break up around us, then regroup again toward Dallas. |
There are services you can subscribe to that will do anything you are willing to pay for. Many companies use these for their specific weather issues. Our municipality uses it for determining snow plow call outs and times.
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Originally Posted by RubeRad
(Post 19522456)
Good for you. Do you want a sticker or a button? Guess what, I don't have (choose not to have) a smartphone. Guess what, I have computers all over the place, and they're all connected to the internet, it also takes me 15 seconds to open a tab and type "weather poway<enter>" and see what the forecast is. And guess what; I'VE TRIED THAT AND IT DOESN'T WORK FOR ME because I never remember to do it. Maybe I should set up a service that automatically sends me an email every day to remind me to check the weather.
Nature is not your enemy. Abandon your need for surveillance and accept what's offered. |
Weather Underground's app will pop up a lock screen alert if there is rain in the next few hours.
If you can't press the power button on your phone and look at the alerts, then there's no help for you. It is kind of amazing that someone could be willing to check their emails but not the weather forecast, but I guess I've never lived somewhere with weather that god-awful boring. |
Originally Posted by RubeRad
(Post 19521752)
...
Everybody else, feel free to tell me how wonderful your life is because you check the weather or get an automated forecast in your email every single damn day. |
Originally Posted by RubeRad
(Post 19521989)
Thank you JReade for answering my actual question! I don't have a smartphone so I can't use it as an app, but I see there's a Chrome extension that clones it, hopefully that will do the trick.
And no thanks to those of you who posted an 'answer' of 'just check the forecast every day'. I know that checking the forecast every day is a solution to my 'problem', and I also know that for me and my life, it is a solution that doesn't work. I don't watch the news, I don't use a smartphone, when I wake up the computer's not on and I don't want to spend the time to turn it on; I just roll out of bed into my biking clothes, grab underwear, socks, and shirt for work, hop on the bike and go. |
"Siri, what's the weather look like today?"
Takes 10 seconds as I walk downstairs to get my breakfast in the morning. OP: "I'm too lazy to check the weather every day." Well then we can't help you. (I just wanted to get in on the flaming, I think the OP is being a bit of a drama queen and think it is hilarious.) |
Originally Posted by RubeRad
(Post 19522567)
You know one thing that's wonderful about living in SoCal? You don't have to check the weather every single damn day!
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Originally Posted by wphamilton
(Post 19524231)
It seems to me that you could set up an email filter that would trashcan every daily alert that didn't mention rain. You'd be left with the few that did - isn't that what you're after?
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A new friend is from Stockholm, Sweden. He said weather forecasts are strange to him because, he says, the weather in Stockholm changes very slowly. It's a safe bet that today's weather will be very similar to yesterday's weather. That surprised me, as I'm used to drastic changes from day to day, especially now that our climate has changed.
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Originally Posted by canklecat
(Post 19523882)
I use so much security stuff on my PCs it always takes longer to fire up than the tablets.
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Originally Posted by Moe Zhoost
(Post 19524089)
Whoa, this is causing you way to much stress. There is only one solution: embrace whatever the weather offers.....
And you are wrong, getting wet is not the only solution. ITFFF gives me exactly what I was looking for. Daily weather emails filtered for mentions of rain is another likely candidate. |
Originally Posted by canklecat
(Post 19523886)
I'm on the west side of Fort Worth. We're in a peculiar geographic mini-region where most of the worst weather goes around us. One of the quirks of Texas is the wind pattern sweeping down from the north or up from the south that follows the terrain closely. After awhile you can pretty well predict which incoming storms are likely to hit us and which are likely to go around or break up around us, then regroup again toward Dallas.
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