Spending hours finding or downloading weather data? Find hourly weather data for any location from 1940 onward from primary sources in seconds so that you can more time on your analysis rather than finding and cleaning weather data. We processed 500+ TB of weather data for quick time-series extraction for location-specific analysis.
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I've used https://oikolab.com/ before. Source: over 1 year ago
For specific locations, I run a data service tool (https://oikolab.com) that can help you get the data to do this. Note that the data is from renalayis data and you would need to do some data filtering of your own. Source: over 1 year ago
Certainly - take a look (https://oikolab.com) and let me know your use case. There is a free tier but we've also given free access to a quite a few number of researchers, non-profits and university students for their projects when they reached out to us. - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
Sure - https://oikolab.com. You can try without signing up via an app too https://weatherdownloader.oikolab.com. Source: over 2 years ago
May not be directly related but I run a weather data service (https://oikolab.com / weatherdownloader.oikolab.com) that's probably one of the more comprehensive one out there (hourly global data from 1950 onward). I've been wondering if looking up historical weather data for any location in the world might be of interest to weather enthusiasts and how I might be able to cater to such group? Thanks! Source: over 2 years ago
That's great, thank you! Does it check recursive dependencies, and could you make it work against a package you haven't installed yet, by specifying the package name as an argument, rather than it only looking at what's already installed? If that's possible, it would be really good to then run it against a list of popular packages, like [1] or [2], and report back which packages are the highest priority for... - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
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