News

Some people don’t need a weather app - they feel the forecast in their bones. A storm rolls in and so do throbbing heads, aching joints and mood drops. For years, this phenomenon was dismissed ...
As wildfires and storms fuel climate worries, the rise of weather content on social media shows there’s a fine line between preparation and obsession ...
Weather hazard maps have nearly 100 colors including six variations of red, a "bisque," "moccasin," cornflower blue, and Dodger blue. Experts are working to simplify the alerts.
A storm rolls in and so do throbbing heads, aching joints and mood drops. For years, this phenomenon was dismissed as imagination or coincidence.
And for now, at least, Beijing views the trade-deficit-obsessed Trump as a more pragmatic and adaptable partner to work with ...
Weather apps regularly differ in their predictions for the same location – why is it so hard to predict local forecasts, and where can we get the best weather information?
The most anticipated season of each year was the annual monsoon, he writes in his memoir “A Billion Butterflies: A Life in Climate and Chaos Theory.” Monsoons follow India’s hottest period and last ...
Of course, there's still plenty more ground to cover, and it looks like the Weather app is getting a welcome update on older ...
You may have been burned by a weather app before, whether it overestimated the heat or underestimated the rain several days in advance. Jim Danner, senior meteorologist at Nexstar, explained these … ...
How Lanesboro's lodging leaders create an 'eclectic' haven for tourists “The people just come to Lanesboro, come to our inn, just prepared to have a good time. So you can only try to make it ...