April 2011
Review
AutomatedBuildings.com

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Weather visualization demonstrates our vision
of data presentation

  Ken Sinclair,  Publisher

This excellent demonstration visualization of weather data points to our future as to how we organize and present our complex building automation data simply.

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Weather Reports
You can now get in-depth weather reports for any location on earth and any time of year. The report aims to answer basic questions such as "what is the weather like on a typical day". This is useful if you're for example planning a trip and would like to know what to expect from the weather where you're there.

Simply select the appropriate date using the controls at the top of the page, and soon the report will appear just above.

This feature is still very much in beta, and we'd love to get your feedback on it (link below). Yes, we do plan to add printable graphs to it ;)

Our April issue is coming to you from Melbourne, Australia so check out the below link and then try pointing it at your own weather location by entering it in the search box at the top of the page


http://weatherspark.com/#!graphs;q=Melbourne,+Victoria,+Australia


About
WeatherSpark is a website dedicated to making in-depth weather information easily accessible.

Team
The team behind WeatherSpark is:

[an error occurred while processing this directive] Jacob Norda
Born and raised in Sweden, Jacob has lived in the San Francisco Bay Area since 2001. He holds a Master's in Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics from Linkoping Insitute of Technology, one year of which was spent on a scholarship at Stanford University.

Jacob worked as a software engineer at Rosum Inc (now defunct), a geolocation startup in 2001/2002, then moved on to Trimble Navigation, first as a software engineer and subsequently software manager. After four and half years there he teamed up with James Diebel and started building websites like this one.
 
James Diebel
Born and raised in Wisconsin, James has lived in the San Francisco Bay Area since 2003. He holds a bachelor's degree in Engineering Mechanics and Astronautics, and Mathematics from University of Wisconsin, and a Ph.D. in Aeronautics and Astronautics from Stanford University (though he may be the most computer science oriented rocket scientist around).

During his tenure at Stanford he teamed up with Jacob Norda and has been working on internet businesses ever since.




 

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