Maybe track heat indexes to see the humidity. Might explain why it feels hotter. Yesterday it was 87°f with 102% relative humitity which is about a 104°f heat index
-South Louisiana. Aka the ball soup capital of the US
You can download weather data from the NOAA National Climatic Data Center. I downloaded 50 years of daily high/low temps from the recording station closest to where I live (as part of some SQL training) The number one thing that I noticed was the extreme variability of the weather.
Stronghold909 on July 12nd, 2018 at 05:08 UTC »
Maybe track heat indexes to see the humidity. Might explain why it feels hotter. Yesterday it was 87°f with 102% relative humitity which is about a 104°f heat index
-South Louisiana. Aka the ball soup capital of the US
dotnetdotcom on July 12nd, 2018 at 06:14 UTC »
You can download weather data from the NOAA National Climatic Data Center. I downloaded 50 years of daily high/low temps from the recording station closest to where I live (as part of some SQL training) The number one thing that I noticed was the extreme variability of the weather.
raimondi1337 on July 12nd, 2018 at 06:55 UTC »
Why would you use blue for high and orange for low? That's the inverse of every other temperature graph ever.