

WeatherCat can also send your weather data to the Weather Underground (Wunderground), the Citizens Weather Observer Program (C.W.O.P.), the Met-Office WOW program, PWSWeather, WeatherBug, OpenWeatherMap and WeatherCloud. A live list of all possible 'tags' that can be used in your templates is available here. In addition, WeatherCat can generate and upload simple Web pages which offer quick 'canned' solution to get your weather data on-line as quickly as possible, as well as template-driven 'custom' Web pages that can contain current conditions, graphs, gauges, statistics, webcam images, and time-lapse movies these Web pages can be uploaded to your server by WeatherCat for display via a Web browser anywhere in the world. WeatherHawk stations equipped with an IP server module.Īs data is gathered and stored in its database, WeatherCat allows you to view weather statistics such as the lowest temperature, or the highest wind speed over any time period stored in the database.

Oregon Scientific WMR 88, 928/968 and WMR200 stations.WeatherCat also supports the WeatherLinkIP data-logger.

#PONCHO WEATHERCAT COMMANDS FOR MAC#
After launching as a bot for Facebook Messenger earlier this month, weathercat picks up some cashĮditor's Note: Our annual Vator Splash Spring 2016 conference is around the corner on at the historic Scottish Rite Center in Oakland.WeatherCat is weather station software for Mac computers. Speakers include Nigel Eccles (CEO & Co-founder, FanDuel), Andy Dunn (Founder & CEO, Bonobos), Mitch Kapor (Founder, Kapor Center for Social Impact) Founders of NextDoor, Handy, TubeMogul, TaskEasy Investors from Khosla Ventures, Javelin Venture Partners, Kapor Capital, Greylock, DFJ, IDG, IVP and more. Poncho, the precious orange "weathercat" bot developed by betaworks, announced today that it has raised a $2 million seed round of funding led by Lerer Hippeau Ventures with participation from Greycroft Partners, Comcast Ventures LP, Venture51 Capital Partners, and RRE Ventures.Īlso participating in the round is Poncho's creator betaworks, a New York City startup studio and seed stage venture capital firm that not only builds and invests in products, but has also acquired and relaunched them. In July 2012, for example, the firm purchased social news aggregator Digg for a reported $500,000. I joke about Yo, but mentioning it gives an idea of what the team behind Poncho is all about: “thin content.” Companies it has invested in include Everlane, GroupMe, Kickstarter, Medium, Path, Stocktwits, TweetDeck, Venmo, and (quite possibly the greatest Silicon Valley technology of all time) Yo.Ī year later, it purchased bookmarking tool and news reader Instapaper from the app’s original creator, Marco Arment.īetaworks also makes seed investments (typically between $100K and $200K). Most companies in the business of content would balk at the idea that their content is “thin,” but for Poncho it’s a key differentiating factor. The company believes that this quick, light content, when provided on-demand and personalized to the needs of the consumer, can be just as valuable as what you might call “thick content.” There’s something to this.
