Show HN: Merry Sky, Dark Sky replacement and merry-timeline open source lib
23 points| guillohm | 3 years ago |merrysky.net
This is a website I worked on during the holidays to fill the void of the upcoming dark sky shutdown. For me, the precipitation timeline was a view I was heavily relying on for everyday activities and planning. I had not found any replacement from the various weather apps. When I found pirateweather.net as a backend API, it gave me the motivation to put the pieces together and get back the experience I enjoyed. I then added more functionalities that I think was missing from the website such as a weekly chart view. I've been using the website reliably over christmas holidays. Hope you enjoy it too!
Also I open sourced the visual component for drawing the precipitation timeline and you can use it for drawing weather information or any other hourly activities really https://github.com/guillaume/merry-timeline
Interested in your feedback!
Evidlo|3 years ago
The plot at the top of MerrySky is harder to quickly grok the min and max temperatures each day of the week. In my opinion, people would prefer to see min/max temperatures and then click to expand to see the hourly temperature and precipitation forecast.
[0]: https://www.droid-life.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/dark-s...
acemarke|3 years ago
I was about to comment that the multi-value graph at the top of the page was distracting and taking up space. Looking at it again, I can see a bit more use out of it, although perhaps still not my first preference. Comparing it vs the current Dark Sky site, I do prefer the existing large current temperature value as the initial visual focus.
The other thing I love about Dark Sky is the visual appearance and the resolution of the precipitation radar map on mobile, including the timing of animating the radar updates over time and the coloring of the base globe. I've tried out a bunch of other Android apps and haven't found anything that _quite_ replicates that. If you could reasonably replicate that, it'd be really neat.
Thanks for putting this together!
guillohm|3 years ago
I agree on the weekly graph being a bit of a distraction. I thought about hiding it especially on mobile. We had a snowstorm and power outage because of strong winds over the holidays. I found it useful to get a general sense of safety with regards to wind speed/gust (up to 110km/h!) and precipitations. In the end, I decided to leave it there initially and maybe confine it to its own section later from the general feedback.
Your feedback on the map is great. I've held off on working on it now since it's a considerable effort and I don't have an API ready to consume that gives that. I wasn't really relying on it from the darksky website but it's definitely on my mind. Other than looking cute, I think there's good value in the precipitation overlay too.
petodo|3 years ago
For instance this was accuracy result for Prague in data collected over 6 weeks in forecasts where sources provided different forecast (how many out of 6 correct): AerisWeather 5.5, Foreca 4, MET Norway 4, AccuWeather 2, Dark Sky 1.5, WeatherBit 1.5, Open Weather 1, World Weather Online 1
And I still keep collecting these data and it's not changing.
guillohm|3 years ago
It would be interesting if you could evaluate this properly and submit feedback again. What is your criteria for correctness? Do you share your samples collected? If I understand correctly you also concluded dark sky was unreliable (1.5). This does not match my experience (Canada). In which way?
st-angel|3 years ago
guillohm|3 years ago
https://merrysky.net/forecast/poughkeepsie/us
If no setting is chosen it currently defaults to SI units. It's not ideal even from my perspective, wind speed in m/s is hard to grasp compared to km/h. In a near update I'd like to have it default to the unit of measurement culturally used at the location of the forecast and allow to save it to user local storage settings for more consistency.
lfconsult|3 years ago
tunapizza|3 years ago
guillohm|3 years ago