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What’s a good weather website?

Anyone know of a weather reporting website that isn’t impregnated with various devotionals to the great consensus of anthropogenic climate change?  You know, someplace where I can just find out what I need to wear when I step outside, and not much else.

6 replies on “What’s a good weather website?”

I’m dissatisfied with Weather Underground for a few reasons I won’t detail. I recently took a look at the weather tab on timeanddate.com and was very pleasantly surprised. I’ll be using that now. The site has terrific astronomical data, too, which is what I’ve used it for in the past.

As noted below… It depends on where you live. If you live on the East or West coast the Geostationary weather satellites are now operational. My brother is the commander of the software aspect of the program.

So the East and West Coast have exponentially more accurate data.

The two Satellites in the works for fly-over country are in progress and being built as I write this.

The general consensus is the most unreliable weather site is the Weather Channel. The one shilling the Global warming fraud. Go figure.

Might as well call them the click-bait channel. Their forecast are notoriously dead wrong on a regular basis.

To learn more on the new satellite systems in progress just search the word GOES. Or, check out the Lockheed Martin site.

Some really cool stuff on the sites online.

Screw the weather report. I live in Western Washington, our weather is fundamentally and comically unpredictable. The forecast is wrong more than it’s right, so I don’t get any benefit from the forecast anyways.

Weather Underground has a nice presentation and local forecasts that can be horrible or very accurate, depending on where you live. You have to learn how to use the site for your area and your preferences:

https://www.wunderground.com/wundermap

At the top level, you can select a local weather station for up close and personal information:

https://www.wunderground.com/

For everything else, there is always the NWS, of course.

https://www.weather.gov/

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