Due to the current gap in continued funding from the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), the NSF Unidata Program Center has temporarily paused most operations. See NSF Unidata Pause in Most Operations for details.
So how many people out there actually have a dish? Since we are getting closer to prime time, I'm getting nervous about feed stability again! I pinged some old feeds of mine from back when I was a professor (yes, I've moved to the dark side awhile ago lol), and they are no more. Essentially I have redundant dishes X miles apart, so my feeds are of course normally stable, but we all know how often the unknown occurs, so I'm looking for people willing to be a redundant backup feed. For those unfamiliar, if a NOAAPort Dish is the primary feed, backup feeds have very minimal loads, unless of course needed. I am of course willing to be a redundant feed to anyone doing the same, and my relays are directly on the Hurricane Electric backbone, so hops will be minimal, and bandwidth is high So if you would like a strong backup, and can provide the same, please send me a ping! Merry Spring! (almost) Cheers, --patrick ------------------------------------------------------- Patrick L. Francis Vice President of Research & Development Aeris Weather http://aerisweather.com/ http://modelweather.com/ http://facebook.com/wxprofessor/ --------------------------------------------------------
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