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by
January 25th, 2007
I'm a huge fan of weather. I can find something to enjoy about every type of atmospheric condition. When most folks run for cover during a thunder storm I'm trying to find the best place to see the lightning show without getting killed.
During the Hurricanes of 2004, I often went out in the wind and rain just to experience the nature of the storms first hand. I love the moodiness of fog, the sharpness of a clear and starry night, the awe of an approaching thunderhead, the bite of an Arctic cold front, and the sauna-like heat of a Summer day in Florida.
I actually watch the Weather Channel.
Some people say I'm nuts. My wife tells the neighbors it's a phase I'm going through, my son tells me I am the reason he's staying in California, and my daughter just shakes her head in sad resignation and hopes it's not hereditary. What can I say? I like weather. So it would stand to reason that I would have a weather application on my Mac.
Many OS X users rely on a weather widget of some type to keep them informed on what's going on outside (or they just stick their heads out the front door), but not me. I use the Open Source app, Meteorologist (Meteo), which sits, almost inconspicuously, in my Menu Bar and displays, via icons, what's going on in my town weather-wise.
Also, once you set it up, the weather in any major and many minor city around the world is just a mouse-click away. Meteo works the way applications on any computer should work: It's there when you need it and out of the way when you don't. Very cool and very convenient. Little wonder that the app has a small, but faithful following, and I am proud to count myself among them.
![]() Meteorologist in all its glory |
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Unfortunately, over the past few months Meteo has been broken, through no fault of the application or the developers. It seems that Weather.com, the source of the weather data used in Meteorologist, changed the format of the city data -- anyone using Meteo before the change (like yours truly) could still use the app, but could not add new cities. New users were just plain out of luck.
Fortunately, however, two Source Forge folks, known as Joe Crobak and Moon Jihad, worked to fix this little app. Moon came up with a quick patch which replaces the XML portion of the application with one that will work with the current city format on Weather.com.
The patch requires you to run a command from the Terminal application. If this makes you scratch your head in confusion, or break out in hives or cold sweats, have no fear; this procedure is very painless and I will step you through it:
- Go to Applications/Utilities and open the Terminal.app application. It should look like this:

- Copy this line of text, and paste it in the terminal window:
sudo curl http://lns.kicks-ass.net/temp-shit/weather.xml -o /Applications/Meteorologist.app/Contents/Resources/weather.xml
- Since you will be copying a file into the Applications, which is a protected folder (meaning that only privileged users can change items in the folder), you must bless this action by entering your login or admin password when asked.
- Hint: if you don't log in to your Mac whenever you start it up, you will still have had to set up a administrative account when you first set up your Mac. The password for this account will work.
- And that's all there is to it. The new XML file will download and install. Restart Meteo and your are good to go.
So, once again, there's a rainbow overhead, the storm has passed, the sky is clearing and all is right with the world.
Thanks again to Joe Crobak and Moon Jihad for their efforts.
Even if you're not a connoisseur of weather, like I am, you should still try Meteo; it's a great app at a great price.
Vern Seward is a writer who currently lives in Orlando, FL. He's been a Mac fan since Atari Computers folded, but has worked with computers of nearly every type for 20 years.
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Observer Comments
QuoteGuest wrote:
You have to add it as an option to be visible/available in Meteo's menu, by going to the preferences and selecting which weather items you want or don't want displayed in the drop down menu.
It's not there. There are not that many options for it to get lost in. The option categories I have are Temperature (2-both checked), Current Weater (1-checked), Menu Bar (2-both checked), Extended Forecast (4- all but "on one line" checked), General (2- both checked). Nothing under Cities, Updating or About.
How do I add radar to my city?
Go to the City Editor and double-click on the name of the city for which you would like radar to be shown. Choose the "Weather Items" tab in the sheet that appears. Scroll down until you see the item "Radar image", and make sure that the checkbox next to it is checked.
Quite simple - though yes, you have to dig a level down to get it, and it's available for pretty much any city.
From the menubar drop down menu, select "Preferences" then select the city, click "Edit City", then click "Weather Items", and scroll down and tic "Radar Image".
Btw - once you get a list of items you like to see for all cities, you merely have to edit the settings for one city, save and apply. Then when selecting other cities, go again to the Weather Items pane and at the bottom import the city preferences from the city whose settings you like.
Thu Jan 25, 2007 3:49 pm Subject: Terminal not required
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