weather alerts

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  • Google Glass update brings The Wall Street Journal, storm warnings and RSS to your face

    by 
    Brian Heater
    Brian Heater
    12.18.2013

    Sure, you've read The Wall Street Journal, but can you really say you've experienced it until you've experienced it #throughglass? The Dow Jones-published paper is among the latest batch of Glassware apps coming to Google's wearable, letting you keep up on breaking news, politics, business and, of course, technology. Weather Alerts, meanwhile, offers 120 different warning categories, including tornadoes and air quality alerts. Also on the docket is Winkfeed, which brings RSS to the device, letting you read news and save stories to your Pocket account. All of those join the recently announced ability to upload videos to YouTube and take part in Google Hangouts through Glass.

  • National Weather Service alerts arriving on iPhone 5 (Updated)

    by 
    Steve Sande
    Steve Sande
    12.18.2012

    Update: For more information on the Weather Alerts System, this FEMA page provides a full description of the one way alert system. Note that the ability to get notifications of AMBER alerts and Emergency Alerts can turned off via a new set of buttons found at the bottom of the Settings > Notifications page on the iPhone 5 under "Government Alerts". Back in June, TUAW reported on the new Wireless Emergency Alerts system from the US National Weather Service. At that time, the system -- which alerts smartphone owners in areas under a severe weather warning -- didn't support iPhones and the system was available on Sprint, Verizon and T-Mobile networks plus a handful of AT&T cities. Well, the system is apparently working with the iPhone 5 at present, as I received the alert you see at right earlier today. The area where I live is currently under a blizzard warning, so I received the message. My wife uses an iPhone 4S on AT&T and did not receive the alert, and Erica Sadun -- with the same equipment and network -- was also left in the dark. I'm not sure if that's because they're on an "older" iPhone model or if AT&T hasn't initiated the service in the Denver area. Anyway, it's great to see this service working. It doesn't require users to sign up, and it's a powerful way to get your attention about upcoming weather emergencies including ice and dust storms, blizzards, extreme winds, flash floods, tornadoes, hurricanes, typhoons and tsunamis.

  • National Weather Service to send alerts to smartphones

    by 
    Steve Sande
    Steve Sande
    06.28.2012

    A new Wireless Emergency Alerts system from the National Weather Service is on the way for American smartphone owners, but don't expect to get alerts about impending tornadoes or blizzards on your iPhone immediately. Starting today, the Wireless Emergency Alerts system will begin alerting people in areas near potentially dangerous weather situations by making a special sound and vibrating. You won't have to sign up or pay for the service, which is part of a larger alert network launched by the Federal Emergency Management Agency earlier this year. Carriers and governments will issue alerts by sending them out from every cell tower in an affected area, so the alerts are not on your home location. The alerts will cover ice and dust storms, blizzards, extreme winds, flash floods, tornadoes, hurricanes, typhoons, and tsunamis. Severe thunderstorm alerts won't be included, and only warnings -- not watches -- are to be sent out. But iPhone owners shouldn't get too excited about the system, which is currently offered nationwide on Sprint, Verizon, and T-Mobile networks and a handful of cities on the AT&T network. Weather Service spokeswoman Susan Buchanan said that iPhones are supposed to join the system this fall, but it's not known if that will only be new iPhones or if all iPhones will be capable via a software update.

  • Wireless Emergency Alert system goes live this month, delivers location-based SMS warnings

    by 
    Joseph Volpe
    Joseph Volpe
    05.14.2012

    Last we heard of the federal government's Wireless Emergency Alert system, only Sprint had signed on to deliver the SMS warnings. Now, with the secured participation of all four major carriers and smaller regional operators, that gratis service is set to go live this month, covering nearly 97 percent of active mobile users. Using a "point-to-multipoint system" that targets at-risk subscribers, the National Weather Service, FEMA, FCC and Department of Homeland Security-backed initiative works by sending location-based messages of 90 characters or less to nearby handsets in the event of an imminent meteorological threat. The mostly opt-out service will also accommodate AMBER and Presidential alerts, although you won't have that flexibility for missives sent from our head of state. So, the next time your phone gives off a strange auditory tone, you'll know to head for shelter.