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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#1
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PM has just started...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/pm/2009/1...weathe_1.shtml Stay tuned. We want to know what YOU think about our brand new weather forecast. Why? A few weeks ago, an informal experiment among our listeners suggested that our nightly weather forecast didn't work for many of them: they couldn't remember the weather for their area. So we asked our audience what would work for them, and had some fun trying out several ideas on air...including using birdsong and regional accents! Because of the interest expressed in all this by listeners to PM and iPM, Radio 4 is using PM to test a brand new style of forecast. It's a sort of pilot scheme and your opinion will help shape how the new forecast is rolled out across the entire network. |
#2
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Les Hemmings wrote:
PM has just started... http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/pm/2009/1...weathe_1.shtml Stay tuned. We want to know what YOU think about our brand new weather forecast. It starts just after 17:55 BST... I hope it's the one they tried in the style of the shipping forecast. That was very clear... |
#3
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On Oct 12, 5:18*pm, "Les Hemmings" wrote:
Les Hemmings wrote: PM has just started... http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/pm/2009/1...nd_new_weathe_... Stay tuned. We want to know what YOU think about our brand new weather forecast. It starts just after 17:55 BST... I hope it's the one they tried in the style of the shipping forecast. That was very clear... I heard it - it was OK. What they need to do now is to eliminate the practice of using towns to represent fairly large areas. 20°C in Southampton? What about Andover, then, people will ask. Why not just say Southern England, or central Southern England, or Hampshire? Even so, an improvement. I wonder if they read these threads. If so, my apologies to Messrs Schafernaker and Tobyn. I'm sure they're terribly nice people and kind to animals. Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey. |
#4
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On 12 Oct, 18:32, Tudor Hughes wrote:
On Oct 12, 5:18*pm, "Les Hemmings" wrote: Les Hemmings wrote: PM has just started... http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/pm/2009/1...nd_new_weathe_.... Stay tuned. We want to know what YOU think about our brand new weather forecast. It starts just after 17:55 BST... I hope it's the one they tried in the style of the shipping forecast. That was very clear... * * * I heard it - it was OK. *What they need to do now is to eliminate the practice of using towns to represent fairly large areas. *20°C in Southampton? *What about *Andover, then, people will ask. *Why not just say Southern England, or central Southern England, or Hampshire? * * * Even so, an improvement. *I wonder if they read these threads. If so, my apologies to Messrs Schafernaker and Tobyn. *I'm sure they're terribly nice people and kind to animals. Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey. Yes, this practice of using towns irritates me, I'm thoroughly p****d off with being told, as the camera briefly swings across SW England, that's it's going to be 16C in Plymouth. The temperature on the opposing coasts of Devon/Cornwall is often so different they could, at the very least, give some idea of the variance. As it happens, it was 16C in Penzance today - same as Plymouth apparently. Graham Penzance |
#5
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![]() "Graham Easterling" wrote in message ... Yes, this practice of using towns irritates me, I'm thoroughly p****d off with being told, as the camera briefly swings across SW England, that's it's going to be 16C in Plymouth. The temperature on the opposing coasts of Devon/Cornwall is often so different they could, at the very least, give some idea of the variance. Trouble is, when you are doing a *national* forecast there probably isn't time to always mention what are in fact quite local variances in temperatures between the north and south coasts of Cornwall, significant though they might well be. What about the north & south coests of Pembrokeshire or north Kent Vs south Kent or the north Norfolk coast and Essex? There is a limit to the 'resolution' you can practically go to in such a forecast. -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl |
#6
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On 12 Oct, 19:43, "Col" wrote:
"Graham Easterling" wrote in message ... Yes, this practice of using towns irritates me, I'm thoroughly p****d off with being told, as the camera briefly swings across SW England, that's it's going to be 16C in Plymouth. The temperature on the opposing coasts of Devon/Cornwall is often so different they could, at the very least, give some idea of the variance. Trouble is, when you are doing a *national* forecast there probably isn't time to always mention what are in fact quite local variances in temperatures between the north and south coasts of Cornwall, significant though they might well be. What about the north & south coasts of Pembrokeshire or north Kent Vs south Kent or the north Norfolk coast and Essex? There is a limit to the 'resolution' you can practically go to in such a forecast. -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl I think when differences are significant there's no great difficulty in sticking say 14C over the north coast & 18C over the south. Doing this and saying something like 'the highest temperatures being along the south coast' is more informative than saying 'the finishing number around 16C in Plymouth'. It's just a particularly useless thing to say - unless you live in Plymouth. I have known 8C difference between St Ives & Penzance (both ways - depending on cloud/fog & wind direction) Minehead is in a different world to Plymouth, with both Exmoor & Dartmoor in between. And yes, I'm sure the same does apply elsewhere. Graham Penzance |
#7
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On Oct 12, 7:43*pm, "Col" wrote:
"Graham Easterling" wrote in message ... Yes, this practice of using towns irritates me, I'm thoroughly p****d off with being told, as the camera briefly swings across SW England, that's it's going to be 16C in Plymouth. The temperature on the opposing coasts of Devon/Cornwall is often so different they could, at the very least, give some idea of the variance. Trouble is, when you are doing a *national* forecast there probably isn't time to always mention what are in fact quite local variances in temperatures between the north and south coasts of Cornwall, significant though they might well be. What about the north & south coests of Pembrokeshire or north Kent Vs south Kent or the north Norfolk coast and Essex? There is a limit to the 'resolution' you can practically go to in such a forecast. -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl The BBC forecasters have so little time to give a comprehensive forecast that it is no wonder that some areas are 'deprived'. NW England barely gets a mention, unless you can work it out from'.east of the Pennines'. The awkward links between newsreader and forecaster doesn't make it any better any better;. 'Is this wet weather going to continue, Tom Dick or Harriet? (Raining in London). How long before a weather forecaster appears as a 'celebrity' on 'Strictly Come Dancing?' We should realise that TV forecasts are for'entertainment', not for a hint of the forthcoming weather. McElwee, Gibbs and one or two others O.K, the rest just BBC clones. |
#8
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On Oct 12, 9:01*pm, TomS wrote:
On Oct 12, 7:43*pm, "Col" wrote: "Graham Easterling" wrote in message .... Yes, this practice of using towns irritates me, I'm thoroughly p****d off with being told, as the camera briefly swings across SW England, that's it's going to be 16C in Plymouth. The temperature on the opposing coasts of Devon/Cornwall is often so different they could, at the very least, give some idea of the variance. Trouble is, when you are doing a *national* forecast there probably isn't time to always mention what are in fact quite local variances in temperatures between the north and south coasts of Cornwall, significant though they might well be. What about the north & south coests of Pembrokeshire or north Kent Vs south Kent or the north Norfolk coast and Essex? There is a limit to the 'resolution' you can practically go to in such a forecast. -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl * * *The BBC forecasters have so little time to give a comprehensive forecast that it is no wonder that some areas are 'deprived'. *NW England barely gets a mention, unless you can work it out from'.east of the Pennines'. * * *The awkward links between newsreader and forecaster doesn't make it any better any better;. * 'Is this wet weather going to continue, Tom Dick or Harriet? (Raining in London). How long before a weather forecaster appears as a 'celebrity' on 'Strictly Come Dancing?' *We should realise that TV forecasts are for'entertainment', not for a hint of the forthcoming weather. *McElwee, Gibbs and one or two others O.K, the rest just BBC clones.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Does anyone who posts on here actually watch BBC forecasts on a regular basis to find out what the weather is likely to do? I watch the odd one, if I've watched the news, but I gave up relying on them for weather information when I started using the Internet. Those forecasts aren't for people who are Internet weather savvy, so it's best not to complain about them as if they are, or as if they should be. If you don't like them, don't watch them. There's far better and more detailed information at your keyboard than you'll ever get via a condensed TV forecast. |
#9
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On 12 Oct, 18:32, Tudor Hughes wrote:
On Oct 12, 5:18*pm, "Les Hemmings" wrote: Les Hemmings wrote: PM has just started... http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/pm/2009/1...nd_new_weathe_.... Stay tuned. We want to know what YOU think about our brand new weather forecast. It starts just after 17:55 BST... I hope it's the one they tried in the style of the shipping forecast. That was very clear... * * * I heard it - it was OK. *What they need to do now is to eliminate the practice of using towns to represent fairly large areas. *20°C in Southampton? *What about *Andover, then, people will ask. *Why not just say Southern England, or central Southern England, or Hampshire? * * * Even so, an improvement. *I wonder if they read these threads. If so, my apologies to Messrs Schafernaker and Tobyn. *I'm sure they're terribly nice people and kind to animals. The presenterr (Simon King?) fluffed it a bit and I find at the time- wasting use of antiquated Fahrenheit comparisons a bit distracting. Otherwise not a bad effort. Martin Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey. |
#10
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![]() "Graham Easterling" wrote in message ... On 12 Oct, 18:32, Tudor Hughes wrote: On Oct 12, 5:18 pm, "Les Hemmings" wrote: Les Hemmings wrote: PM has just started... http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/pm/2009/1...nd_new_weathe_... Stay tuned. We want to know what YOU think about our brand new weather forecast. It starts just after 17:55 BST... I hope it's the one they tried in the style of the shipping forecast. That was very clear... I heard it - it was OK. What they need to do now is to eliminate the practice of using towns to represent fairly large areas. 20°C in Southampton? What about Andover, then, people will ask. Why not just say Southern England, or central Southern England, or Hampshire? Even so, an improvement. I wonder if they read these threads. If so, my apologies to Messrs Schafernaker and Tobyn. I'm sure they're terribly nice people and kind to animals. Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey. Yes, this practice of using towns irritates me, I'm thoroughly p****d off with being told, as the camera briefly swings across SW England, that's it's going to be 16C in Plymouth. The temperature on the opposing coasts of Devon/Cornwall is often so different they could, at the very least, give some idea of the variance. As it happens, it was 16C in Penzance today - same as Plymouth apparently. Graham Penzance =================== Ha ha ha you should try living on Dartmoor! Not a hope in hell of hearing what it is going to do. It's either someone blethering on about fog and it's clear or someone blethering on about cloud and its foggy, or someone blethering on about a damp start and there is an inch of snow on the ground! Will -- |
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