As the 2013 Atlantic
Hurricane Season approaches, consider the benefits of technology when reviewing
your Emergency Action Plan. There are many available
communications for iPad, iPhone, iPod
Touch, BlackBerry and Smartphone users, including those listed below. Most have an associated cost so you’ll
need to do your homework.
· Flashlight App When Japan experienced the tsunami, flashlight
Apps were the # 1 download on smartphones. This feature will come in handy during
a power outage.
· Hurricane HD lets you track storms
with moving radar and satellite imagery from the National Hurricane Center . It provides tropical bulletins,
forecasts, and advisories. You
can watch video updates for current storms and find data on major storms of the
past.
·The Weather Channel has fully customizable weather maps,
animated radar maps, detailed weather conditions and forecasts, severe weather
alerts, and a notification bar with the current temperature and severe weather
alert indicator. It allows you to get weather forecasts for your location or
search by city, ZIP Code, street
address, or landmark. This
App also includes interactive maps that are fully customizable and feature the
functionality of Google Maps. You can decide to display layers such as radar,
clouds, UV index, rainfall, and more.
· AccuWeather’s iPad
App has an advanced Hurricane Center that lets you track the latest
hurricanes. The current
position and expected paths of active hurricanes are plotted on a Google Map.
All news stories and expert videos related to the tropics are easily
accessed. Weather warnings
are displayed on the forecast page to keep you alert of any weather-related
watches or warnings for your area.
· Hurricane Hub is a comprehensive hurricane information portal with
everything from NOAA forecasts, current storm maps, eye-witness reports and
general hurricane information and trivia to tips for riding out a storm,
donating or volunteering in relief efforts, and tools for reconnecting family
members after a storm. It offers quick access to an overview map of active
storms, computer models of projected paths from different agencies via
SkeetobiteWeather.com, three- and five-day cones for active storms from NOAA,
and satellite imagery of different ocean basins from Weather Underground.
·Global Alert Network delivers hands-free national traffic and weather alerts. See
iTunes for Apple devices or go to BlackBerry for a
download. The Global Alert
Network automatically broadcasts audible hands-free alerts to mobile devices.
You can choose to subscribe to weather or traffic alerts, which are
geo-targeted to your location.
One
last consideration: You may
not have power after a hurricane. Prior
to the storm, be sure to fully charge your electronic devices. Also consider purchasing a solar
charger to keep your smartphones, tablets, and other small devices operable.
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