„Irreführende Wetter-Apps können Attraktionen bis zu 137.000 £ pro Tag kosten“

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/czj18j09wvro

Von PurchaseDry9350

14 Kommentare

  1. As someone who cycles to work, my prices is too check the BBC weather. Is it shows sunny I don’t worry. If it shows cos I generally don’t work. 

    If it shows potential rain, I go on the Met office website and check what a raincloud actually means and when it might hit based on the rain map.

    Raincloud icons and % chances of rain are meaningless.

  2. Simplyobsessed2 on

    Weather apps should be tailored to the needs of ordinary people not to the niche audience of owners of tourist attractions who want to line their pockets. I’m sure most people realise from experience that a rain icon summarising the day doesn’t necessarily mean 24 hours of non-stop rain.

  3. Express-Doughnut-562 on

    The met office seem pretty good with the icons tbh. If it’s raining in waking hours, you get a rainy icon. If it rains only overnight, you get a non rainy icon.

    That makes sense; in the majority of cases you want to know if it’ll rain in the day *at all.* If you are going out or putting washing out 1 rainy hour is a pain in the arse that should be notified.

  4. 50_61S-----165_97E on

    The main issue is the % rain indicator, it’s very misleading. It shows the percentage of forecast simulations that predict it’s going to rain.

    It causes confusion because many people interpret it as the percentage of time that it’s going to be raining. So when they see 40% rain, they’re actually more than likely not going to experience any rain at all.

  5. i find the built in iphone weather app is kinda bad for being misleading.

    If it will rain for 10 minutes on a certain day, the icon for that day will be rain. I imagine a lot of people dont then go look at the precipitation graph to see that there’s only a smal window where rain is likely.,

  6. 8fqThs4EX2T9 on

    I just look at the individual layers on the met office site. Rainfall, cloud cover mainly sometimes wind gust max.

    Works out pretty well combining observed and forecast displays. Perhaps people should do a proper check before major outings.

  7. While we’re at it, can someone fix the pollen count apps?

    I can assure everyone that for those of us with tree pollen allergies this week has not been ‘good’ despite what any app might claim.

  8. People should just use zoom.earth. its not 100% accurate but it shows you where rain etc will roughly be

  9. Ok_Impact9745 on

    It’s the UK, just accept that if you go for a day out then it might rain. It’s only a bit of water.

    I’d rather go out when it’s raining than the hottest day of the year when it’s too hot to function.

  10. PolarLocalCallingSvc on

    Why would you avoid going to the zoo in the rain?

    Kids won’t care, adults can take brolleys, a bunch of it is indoors, get to splash about in puddles.

  11. High-Tom-Titty on

    Google used to ask me if it was raining when I checked the weather. No idea what they did with the info I gave them, but their forecasts did seem to be a bit more accurate years ago.

  12. I always think about the insane cost in agriculture that weather has on us and especially these apps. Time your silage wrong, get it wet and you now have a big concentrate bill lined up for winter to get the energy levels you need.

    Getting tougher and tougher with the less predictable climate too

  13. SignalButterscotch73 on

    I’ve been using the met office app for years, nothing about it is confusing. An hour by hour forecast is available for the entire week and the forecast is updated regularly.

    If you can only look at the day, instead of looking for the specific time you intend to go somewhere then you need to get a better app.

    If you can look for that specific timeperiod and choose not to out of laziness, that’s a you problem, not an app problem.

Leave A Reply