sieglege
Newbie
Posts: 72
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« Reply #1 on: March 02, 2011, 08:59:01 AM » |
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David and I have been discussing this topic on our drives to sailing sites. Ice reporting - or lack of it - is still a challenge.
How many times have we had a free day or weekend but not seen any report, only to hear after the fact that there was sailing somewhere?
My vote would be to report on "maybe" sites and let people make their own decision based on their schedule, driving distance and desire to sail. Waiting until the next day....well it's just too late - we've missed a potential day of sailing. I don't want to keep "chasing ice" as my wife says, but if there is a reasonably chance for good ice and some degree of safety (or disclaimer), then I'd like to be informed.
And as a class, we also need to better take advantage of technology that wasn't available even a few years ago. Most of our region now has complete data connectivity via cell phone, and smart phones are conservatively expected to have 50% market share by end of 2011. We have facebook, twitter, google maps, text messaging, and many other platforms that we can use to (passively) "push" ice reports to all interested sailors instead of requiring active and multiple checks of the forums (which are not mobile web friendly) or ice line. Many of these technologies are good solutions for "many-to-many" reporting, where we collect information from many sources and push it to many recipients. The phone hotline still has a place, but the web can offer much more info (links to maps, infrastructure, local weather, etc.).
I've experimented a bit with some mobile friendly web pages (I have a Central Ice twitter account and some mapping experiments), but I think the effort would be better if we had some additional talent out there working together as a class. Maybe make this a goal for next season to have this in place.
Do we have some web programmers out there who could help? I can offer web design (but not the programming) and server space.
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