Well, it is obviously a matter of opinion and we all have one.

I have also used Weather Underground, and they are good.  I don't dispute that. 
I do urge that data from "personal weather stations" be taken with a grain of 
salt.  These are not certified, calibrated instruments and they are often 
poorly 
placed.  After noting WIDE discrepancies in ones near my home, I disabled their 
display in Weather Underground, only letting it display nearest airport (the 
sites run by NWS).

Up until some time last year (in the fall??) I would have agreed that WU had a 
better display.  NWS greatly improved their scripts for their weather pages.  
For their "point forecasts" I prefer their page now (point forecasts are by zip 
code or small town).  Their zone forecasts, at a county level, are still 
nothing 
to write home about.  If you haven't looked at NWS lately, I recommend looking 
at the point forecast for your zip code vs Weather Underground and form your 
own 
opinion.  See my earlier note if you can't figure out how to switch the NWS 
page 
to metric.

WU does include the METAR, the raw weather observations broadcast to pilots.  A 
coded text format, but they have a primer on how to read it.  Sometimes it 
helps 
to see the raw data and units.  Via a link at the bottom, NWS has a very nice 
tabular, hourly forecast for the next 48 h.  In my opinion, it is worth having 
bookmarks to both for your base location(s).  Which one you use most is up to 
you.




________________________________
From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, March 13, 2013 1:18:03 PM
Subject: [USMA:52511] Weather Forecasts

Reference was made on this list by John Steele to the www.National Weather 
Service's forecast page (www.weather.gov).  I would like to point out that the 
NWS site is quite an inferior source for such information.

I would recommend instead Weather Underground (www.weatherunderground.com) as 
by 
far the best resource available, better even than Accuweather.  Its metric 
usage 
is perfection, having been worked on by our own USMA meteorologist, Dr. Don 
Hillger.

EVERYTHING is in SI units, if you set it that way under Settings (Metric 
instead 
of English units, as they are called there).  Moreover, the amount of 
information far surpasses that of the NWS site, as thousands of local digital 
weather stations in backyards are included, with more data, lists, and graphs 
than you can imagine.

Martin Morrison
Metric Training & Education Columnist, USMA's "Metric Today"

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