Weathrman 2.5: In the mix

So I’ve made a few more small tweaks since the 2.x series started, the biggest of which is in who provides our weather data.

Yahoo’s feed is damn good; it has flaws, but it also has huge benefits to us - the most important of which is that Yahoo’s weather API provides current conditions and the sunrise/sunset times in your location.  This means that as of 2.4, we started preferring photographs of sunrises and sunsets whenever the weather was clear or cloudy.

As of 2.5, we’re again increasing the number of queries we perform on a search, and that’s going to increase the amount of time we spend updating; but the upside is that we’ve got more images to choose from, and as of now, we’re going to stop preferring what Flickr thinks is interesting, and start randomly selecting from the set of selections we have at the nearest location to you we can get them.

For a while, I was seeing the same photos, day after day - now, I don’t think I’ve seen the same thing twice.  At the moment, I have a particularly beautiful view of Leicester Square, taken by maistora.

I look forward to hearing your opinions on the new version.

Incremental updates: Weathrman 2.3

Three more releases since I last posted; each picked up on small feature requests and things on my TODO list.

First, foremost, and most recent is the change to Flickr’s weather API.  Google’s is free-text, and there’s no clear listing of what, exactly, it returns.  Yahoo has a nice, clean API and a simple enumeration of possible conditions, making my life much, much easier when it comes matching conditions to an appropriate set of search terms.

Changes to the “about this image” view when you double-tap the screen now shows the weather conditions at the moment the image was gathered, which should help me diagnose when people see volcanos.  Also, the weather condition associated with a volcano is now “Imminent volcanic death”.  I look forward to seeing that bug report.

Last, there have been some changes to the way preview works.  People expect an instantaneous preview, but as of right now, the process of fetching an image is anything but instant; also, we use lots of data, and Flickr’s APIs are blocked by some carriers.  I’ve replaced preview with a carefully rendered view explaining these and other issues to users.

I’ve got some very positive feedback as of late, but as always, more is better.  I look forward to hearing from you.