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I do have a home weather station. I always wanted one that I could stream data and collect/view over time. The one I currently has streams data to two different external sites and one internal service that goes to a server where the data is saved and graphed. If I can spend some time to get it to also stream out to this I will since I am already doing a bunch of other citizen science stuff.

Archive (HackerNews): https://archive.today/DFtxs Article (orig): https://www.weather.gov/iln/cwop Archive (orig): https://archive.today/1UBnf

From the post:

>Do you own a personal home weather station and a computer with a dedicated connection to the Internet, such as fiber, DSL or cable? If you do, the National Weather Service (NWS) and local television meteorologists would love to see your data! The NWS can ingest your frequently-posted weather data into our data and display systems, which can not only improve computer model data (and subsequent weather forecasts) for your area, but also makes the NWS and local television meteorologists aware of micro-climates (unique temperature, wind and precipitation patterns) specific to your local area.

I do have a home weather station. I always wanted one that I could stream data and collect/view over time. The one I currently has streams data to two different external sites and one internal service that goes to a server where the data is saved and graphed. If I can spend some time to get it to also stream out to this I will since I am already doing a bunch of other citizen science stuff. Archive (HackerNews): https://archive.today/DFtxs Article (orig): https://www.weather.gov/iln/cwop Archive (orig): https://archive.today/1UBnf From the post: >>Do you own a personal home weather station and a computer with a dedicated connection to the Internet, such as fiber, DSL or cable? If you do, the National Weather Service (NWS) and local television meteorologists would love to see your data! The NWS can ingest your frequently-posted weather data into our data and display systems, which can not only improve computer model data (and subsequent weather forecasts) for your area, but also makes the NWS and local television meteorologists aware of micro-climates (unique temperature, wind and precipitation patterns) specific to your local area.

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