New Site Online! Your feedback is appreciated...
We couldn't be any more excited about the new website, which we spent the past few months building with the help of DharmaTech, out of Salt Lake City.
The site offers us a new face, a more standardized platform on which we can work, and a more organized manner by which we can publish content and provide you with quality information.
There are a number of things that we still plan and hope to do in the coming months, and as we get off the ground will be working on those. Below is a current list of items that we know as being issues and have plans to work on. These are not in any particular order...
- Upload the rest of the photos from the old site
- Fix logo to become a banner like on the old site
- Improve the Observation Area, allowing you to search for Obs
- Improve the Incidents database, allowing you to post and search
- Improve the integration between our Membership sign-up and our website (integrate)
- Improve the quality of the advisory emails
- Import all past advisories
In the meantime, we are interested in your comments and feedback. Some things are easier to do and accommodate than others, but we'd be happy to know issues that you think should be fixed or things that we may have overlooked.
Thanks for your support and enjoy the new site!
I'll fix that link and get those included in there...
Just a few:
Site looks great! Very sleek and simple design is easy on the eyes.
Second model link does not work (18Z GFS run?)
How come only GFS model links are given?
San Jose State has higher resolution NAM212 and NAM218 runs with all kinds of fun output...
http://www.met.sjsu.edu/weather/
http://www.met.sjsu.edu/weather/nam212-west.html
http://www.met.sjsu.edu/weather/nam218-cal.html
University of Utah has beautiful graphics as well...
http://weather.utah.edu/
I love the octopus polar stereographic northern hemisphere tropopause pressure graphs from GFS runs, and of course! the theta and theta-e time heights from both GFS and NAM. The four panel troppres, vorticity and w (not omega), 700mb pres/height/midlevel rh and slp/precip graphic is amazing!!! lots of info contained in those 4 panels!
UCAR site has tons of goodies, especially upper air analyses and the most recent soundings (maybe this should go in observations?). Now you can forecast mountain waves with ease!
http://www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/upper/
NWS Reno now is running a 4km WRF model and posting output under weather maps...
Full disc imagery from NOAA is neat:
http://www.goes.noaa.gov/goesfull.html
Just thought I'd share some love!!!
Paz
one more from da islandz! full pacific view brah!
http://weather.hawaii.edu/models/index.cgi?banner=uhmet&model=gfs&domain...


The site looks great!
Thanks for continuing to provide this great service to all of us.