Tropical Cyclone Advisories released by the NHC are now available through RSS. This page is a brief summary of RSS, what it does and how you can use it.
The latest version of RSS (2.0) is an acronym for Really Simple Syndication (see specifications). It is a method of summarizing the latest news and information from a website in a lightweight form that can be easily read by a number of news readers or news aggregators. Additionally, modern web browsers can interpret RSS directly without additional add-on software. The idea of RSS is to give users the ability to quickly obtain the latest updates from a web site in a headline or a news digest format. This in turn helps reduce load on the web servers during high-traffic periods.
Most modern web browsers, such as Mozilla Firefox
and Internet Explorer 7 can read
RSS feeds automatically (sometimes they refer to the feeds as "Live Bookmarks"). Alternatively, you can use a stand-alone feed reader or
news aggregator. These are applications that can be set to read the feeds on a recurring basis,
generally once an hour or so.
Here is a list of feed
readers and news aggregators from the Open Directory Project.
Here is another list of feed readers and news aggregators.
Once you have installed a feed reader or news aggregator, you simply add the NHC feed addresses to the list of feeds in the reader. The installation instructions for the readers will help you with that. If your browser, newsreader or aggregator uses "auto-discovery" then simply enter the main NHC address (http://www.nhc.noaa.gov) and it will find all of the active feeds.
We currently offer several aggregate feeds:
Note that at the present time our Spanish-language text products are limited to the Tropical Weather Outlook and the Public Advisories for Atlantic, Caribbean, and Gulf of Mexico tropical cyclones. All of our Spanish text products are courtesy of the NWS San Juan Weather Forecast Office, Puerto Rico.
Starting in 2005, we began offering per-storm feeds, where the feed information is specific to each active storm. The feeds are numbered from 1-5 using the same number as is used for the advisories for an active storm (this is called the "storm wallet" for historical reasons).
Here are the addresses for the feeds:
You can click on the links to view the RSS feeds in your browser, but you might need a feed reader, news aggregator, or modern web browser to process the information.
If you have problems, questions, or feedback regarding the RSS feeds, please send them to our webmaster.
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Page last modified: Wednesday, 17-Sep-2008 16:22:58 GMT