bazzargh 4 days ago

I noodled with a project a couple of years ago to pick art based on the weather https://bazzargh.github.io/weather/

put it on 'manual filter' and try setting some of the filters, you can see the tagged images it comes up with. I wasn't really interested in this being an accurate weather report, I was thinking more of using it in a photoframe or as a desktop background for mood.

the image tags are all in here https://github.com/bazzargh/bazzargh.github.io/blob/master/w...

and were largely done manually, I started by picking paintings I liked, then looking for gaps in the tags and trying to find paintings to cover those.

  • duck 3 days ago

    Your page is getting flagged for phishing on Chrome.

    • bazzargh 3 days ago

      Huh. That's new. I'm guessing it must have been someone who read it here, I don't think I ever even posted it anywhere else. I'm not sure what they could think it's phishing for; there's no links out, no redirection, and nowhere for you to enter any personal information; the only thing it does is pull images from wikimedia, plus the source code is right there for all to see?

      If it was anyone here who reported it... mind telling us why?

    • lbotos 3 days ago

      In FF as well, Just reported it as "not suspicious"

LeoPanthera 4 days ago

Ha, this is great. I hooked up an old photo frame to OpenAI's DALL-E image generator, which is told to make an image based on the current weather data right now. It updates every few hours.

This is what it's showing right now: https://ibb.co/8K5jZ3B

  • riedel 4 days ago

    See also: https://github.com/blixt/sol-mate-eink (using city images)

    • tanvach 3 days ago

      Really cool! Thanks for sharing. Is there a reason rpi 5 is needed versus older versions of rpi (which I have plenty)?

      • riedel 2 days ago

        Not my project and I only know it because a friend starred it. Guessing I would say you could run it with sth much less powerful as it just calls the openai based online service linked. Just thought the look is kind of nice.

    • kbutler 4 days ago

      This is really lovely!

lds133 3 days ago

Thanks everyone for the valuable feedback. In addition to the description in the readme, I'd like to share my specific use case for the project, which may not be immediately obvious.

I have the screen set up on my desk, and the image evolves throughout the day. Watching these changes is surprisingly enjoyable. For example, rain might appear from the right side and disappear after a few hours, or trees might start to grow. Meanwhile, the sun and moon steadily move forward, marking the transition between day and night.

Another fun aspect is how the setup resembles a binary clock. People often suspect it represents something meaningful but don’t always know how to interpret it. Still, the simplicity of the design invites them to try and figure it out.

qnleigh 4 days ago

This is super-fun. Kinda makes me want to do the following: set up a camera to take regular photos of a greenspace near my house. Record couldcover data and date stamps alongside the images, and then then show the most similar image to the current forecast as a background, maybe on my laptop. Wouldn't convey as much information as this project, but it could be very satisfying.

lxe 3 days ago

Cute, and with small adjustments, I'd be legitimately using this. There are just better ways to interpret things:

1. Make the bending trees signify wind direction. Have to get creative with north and south, but a tree bent down vs out can do, and the bend or size and clustering of trees should signify magnitude of the wind.

2. Put sunrise and sunset as literally sun over the horizon, not the sun and moon.

3. Make the night sky shaded differently than day

4. Don't start at "current time" but rather a fixed point, either morning or midnight, and specify the "now" via the location of the house

  • lds133 3 days ago

    The idea offers plenty of room for creativity, but I was limited by the small black-and-white screen. There's no way to show trees bending in the wind or snails crawling across it. However, there's still space in the sky to add fun elements, like a stork for someone's birthday or Santa's sleigh during the holidays. I'm waiting for larger, full-color E-Ink screens to become affordable.

    • andai 3 days ago

      Another comment posted a project using waveshares 7 inch color epaper ($85).

  • folli 3 days ago

    All good points, agreed. Except #4, would be cute if there's some animal that moves along instead of the house.

    And perhaps playing with some kind of isometric perspective could help visualize wind directions?

    • xattt 3 days ago

      > Would be cute if there's some animal that moves along instead of the house.

      I can suggest a snail with a shell that has a window and a chimney out the back!

      It can also be a something man-made but playful like a freight train with a caboose. You’d only see the back end of the train and it would move off screen over the course of the day.

      Mind you, trains are now ruined for me with John Oliver’s production of Thomas the tank engine.

  • efitz 3 days ago

    Maybe shadows (length and direction) could give a sense of time of day, along with shading of sky and land.

vages 3 days ago

Reminds me of the main view in the Yr.no app, which visualises the weather as a picture of how things would look outside a window at different times of the day. It is actually quite easy to get a feel for the amount (and type) of precipitation, as well as the wind, from the animations.

However, you only get to see one moment at a time, requiring you to scroll horizontally through the day, and the temperature is only shown as a number.

https://apps.apple.com/no/app/yr/id490989206?l=nb

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=no.nrk.yr&pcam...

nelblu 4 days ago

Great work! That said if we are focusing on the UX, windy.com has got the best weather reporting experience.

Ex: I am almost never interested in "30% chance of shower at 08:00pm" type of forecast. I am more interested in the trend in which the clouds/rains are moving. This helps me figure out which direction I can drive to get the best sunshine or whatever else.

Is there anyone else who is doing it the way windy.com is doing? I really love them, and so far their experience is great (almost no dark UX patterns), that said I would love to see some more competition in this space.

  • jasonmarks_ 4 days ago

    > This helps me figure out which direction I can drive to get the best sunshine or whatever else.

    I published a road trip weather app that crunches forecasts for you if you're going for a drive and would like to avoid the worst of the weather. It's great for evaluating whether to start a trip during the evening or the next morning. Timestamps are built using Google directions so you have about as accurate a forecast as you can in 2024.

    > I am almost never interested in "30% chance of shower at 08:00pm" type of forecast.

    I understand this sentiment but that is sorta where medium term forecasting is right now.

    Android or iOS https://weatherthetrip.com/download

  • captainkrtek 4 days ago

    I’m a big fan of Meteoblue, they provide a lot of different forecast ensemble visualizations. While not the same as windy in terms of ux, it does a good job of conveying model uncertainty and model agreement.

  • kbutler 4 days ago

    We used windy.com earlier this year to choose our location for the total eclipse in Texas. Worked out perfectly - great view for the eclipse, then the clouds rolled in...

sieste 3 days ago

I fully expected an llm hooked up to an image gen ai that turns weather forecast into hyper realistic images, and was pleasantly surprised to see a good old deterministic mapping of data onto carefully chosen visuals in a system where an actual human made actual design choices. how strange!

jp57 4 days ago

It's an interesting idea, but some of the image semantics seem weirdly wrong. In particular, the sky shouldn't be light at night, and the sun shouldn't be high at sunrise.

If you have to learn counterintuitive things like "the appearance of the sun anywhere in the sky indicates sunrise", and "nighttime is indicated by, well, idk what exactly, but it's not darkness", it kind of fails at it's main purpose, I think.

EDIT: I'll add that many weather apps have a left-to-right timeline of some sort, and indicate sunrise and sunset with intuitive iconography.

EDIT2: The Windy.com timeline view shows sky condition, day/night, moon phase, temperature, precipitation, and wind speed and direction in a nice compact left-to-right timeline. (click the summary in the upper left)

3abiton 4 days ago

This is one of the best microcontroller projects I've encoutered recently! Amazing work!

pcl 3 days ago

Chamonix does something like this for their weather forecasts. It works really well! Lots of info available at a glance, especially once you get accustomed to the format.

https://en.chamonix.com/weather

leobg 3 days ago

These are gorgeous. What a great idea.

danny8000 3 days ago

How much effort to create a weather app for ios or andriod that works like this? Maybe so something for the nest home max or echo show? I love the idea, but what is the easiest way to get this onto the most number of devices?

rickcarlino 4 days ago

Love the monochrome artwork, great work on this project.

unknown2342 3 days ago

Very nice and inspiring idea I will try to implement it and my project

tamimio 4 days ago

Looks great, would love if it was fully offline and interface with sensors directly

  • celie56 4 days ago

    Maybe I misread the docs, but it looked like it was generating a visual for the whole day. If this were offline you could have it double as a clock and regenerate the image every N minutes.

darrylcodes 3 days ago

This is really cool! I would use this daily if it were an app

hinkley 3 days ago

Reminds me a little bit of Tad Williams’ Otherland series.

yaj54 4 days ago

It's like a line-scan camera for the weather.

jerjerjer 4 days ago

From readme:

> Traditional weather stations often display sensor readings as raw numerical data. Navigating these dashboards can be overwhelming and stressful, as it requires significant effort to locate, interpret, and visualize specific parameters effectively.

Simply fascinating. The reverse holds true for me. Numbers provide easily identifiable and recognizable references, while sample images look incomprehensible to me. Without accompanying descriptions, I'd never guess what the author is getting at (except in the broadest of strokes). To each their own, of course.

  • lds133 3 days ago

    Don't take it too seriously :)

SebastianKra 4 days ago

If you'd like to see this implemented in a practical way, check out Weather Strip.

It's a master class in information density while also being intuitive and readable.

https://www.weatherstrip.app/

lb1lf 4 days ago

In a somewhat related vein, the wonderful Ootside[0] website gives you the weather with a Scottish twist.

Mostly, the weather around where I live is described as 'Mostly shite'.

[0] https://ootsi.de/

  • grahamj 3 days ago

    Mine is "Glaekit", whatever that means.

    • bazzargh 2 days ago

      It means 'stupid' in Scots so... probably just a joke by the author? Or maybe they were reaching for some similar words and missed - like 'drookit' (soaking wet), 'gloweret' (ominous sky), 'gloamin' (twilight), 'glaupit' (slimy, muddy), 'glamsy' (sky a mix of bright and dark)

      There's a dictionary here https://dsl.ac.uk/ but glaekit is a common enough word in normal conversation in scotland, most people here would know what it means.

bobabob 4 days ago

It looks lovely but it's absolutely incomprehensible beyond "maybe it'll rain" and "maybe i'll be sunny". Without the explanation of what the symbols meant I'd never guess.

  • lds133 3 days ago

    Yes, this is part of the fun. Kind of having a binary clock on the table.

pilooch 4 days ago

Can't wait for the stable diffusion version :)

  • lds133 3 days ago

    Now there are two of us.