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Dinarius


24 May 2008
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Wind Storm Timelapse.


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Facebook does not take animated GIFs. So I placed here a time lapse of a storm we got bringing hail, 70 MPH wind and that cool, green sky that’s really creepy. Every 12 seconds, a photo just missing the first cloud ring – the second ring is the smooth one that zooms in over the camera bringing a wall of really strong wind. This storm was preceeded by a double-rainbow that collapsed into the appearance of one, out-of-focus rainbow.

South Florida storm approaching in a classic manner.

14 May 2008
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15MAY08 Free Iced-Coffee Day!*



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Dunkin Donuts Free Coffee Day! If you missed it last year, try not to this time! From what Dunkin’ Donuts tells The Gothamist.com in New York:

…if you lined up each cup of iced coffee served on Free Iced Coffee Day lid-to-lid, the line would stretch for more than 236 miles; or if you’d rather, stacking the cups on top of one another they would reach nearly 300 miles into the sky, the vantage point of a typical space shuttle orbit. So, um, try to bring your own mug to cut down on waste…

So, your footnote – * This is only available in participating locations and based on 14 phone calls to surrounding Miami Dunkin Donuts, 8 say that they ARE participating tomorrow!

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25 January 2008
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Tech Allowed In Miami ING Marathon.



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Bring your 16-megabit beat tracks a-runnin'.25JAN08 – Consistently, MP3 players and walkmans and diskman devices have been banned from marathons. Runners consider them as invaluable as shoes and organizers worry about runners not hear the sound of oncoming dangers. Both sides are easy to tease – troublesome is the idea that organizers would allow dangers to sneak up on a thousand runners. My useless wit aside, this Sunday’s marathon broke ground by being one of the first to allow runners to tote their MP3 players! Scavangers be alert! The ground could be strewn with iPods, Creative ZENs and Nano MP3 players thanks to crappy belt clips and arm bands. The rewards for winning or completing the race are actually pretty tempting.

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31 August 2006
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Backrubs and Movies


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8.31 – After three counties in South Florida over-prepared for Ernesto, the best thing to do was watch movies, play with a massager and get further into two books. Ernesto came across Miami-Dade County as a weak little rainstorm with impressively fast moving clouds. Not even the best spin doctors at Weather Channel could force a disaster out of the puddles. Despite its weakness, the city of Miami Beach imposed a State of Emergency ensuring that businesses would stay closed and residents would remain at home.

Best damn popcorn @ 4/$1

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29 August 2006
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Decifer Mama Nature


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8.29 – Ernesto’s a wimp. That’s my prediction; but you can’t be too safe. Last year, Wilma looked to be a wimp before landfall. All of us who underestimated Wilma got quite the surprise. Wilma, South Florida’s end-of-season Catagory 01 hurricane, clobbered all but 119 of Miami-Dade’s 2,200 traffic signals snarling traffic for weeks and pounded Florida Power and Light’s utility poles blinding residents at nightfall for weeks.


WILMA versus MIAMI


Many of us depend heavily on The Weather Channel for updates during these times. The truth is that all the information they use to predict and advise is available for us to assimilate ourselves. Do-It-Yourself weather during an emergency isn’t highly recommended, but here’s what you can find no matter when in the world you are in case TWC and Governor Jeb Bush aren’t handy enough to tune-in on the television.

Terrapins up in Maryland University present dry data (though not nearly as dry as Weather.Unisys.com including advisories for Tropical Storms and Hurricanes. Their JAVA tracker maps are merely interesting and forecast nothing; they only track the history of a storm. So we’ll need something more dynamic.

Weather Underground :: Tropical has a peculiar likeness to TWC’s site. Hurricanes get mapped, plotted, animated and stuck on the front page instantly. Just so you know, the ONLY Weather Toolbar we don’t recommend against is the one from TWC’s site.

The clever chasers at HurricaneTrack.com might actually be a little insane. Their motto is that we, the visitors, track it, and they’ll take us there. The poster at left is available in their store and, frankly typing, we must say that it’s a beauty of a poster. no proceeds of the sales go to us at all, but what a looker this look back at last year’s record breaking storms is! Video reports and a blog-style kindness to the site make it pretty fun to visit. Unfortunately, we can’t recommend many of the other sites that are refered to in the margins, but that’s life. Their access to live webcams is pretty interesting however. Now, how about some RSS so that the news comes to us instead?

The National Hurricane Center will let you pick a storm and XML stories about it to yourself which simplifies a great deal of research and effort. What happens when the storm is gone? Although it’s not RSS able, Weather.gov’s country map is a neat catch-all of everything going on. Clicking on a region will zoom in for more detailed maps and alerts.


Basic warning zones.


Collegiate papers on hurricanes and predictions may benefit from the following, otherwise dull, links: FSU probability study, The Atlantic Tropical Weather Center crammed to the hilt with links, those B&W maps everyone uses are born at GOES.NOAA.gov, get the NAVY’s take, historical archive compliments of Weather.Unisys.com,Weathermatrix’s huge mess of trackers and posts and pics and vids.