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Future Marine

Future Marine . Charlie Paxton National Weather Service Tampa Bay Area, Florida. This is a great opportunity!. Collectively, we have the knowledge to envision the future and the resources to make it come true. Where do we start?. Who are we doing this for?. Who is our audience?. Mariners.

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Future Marine

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  1. Paxton/Marine Web

  2. Future Marine Charlie Paxton National Weather Service Tampa Bay Area, Florida Paxton/Marine Web

  3. This is a great opportunity! • Collectively, we have the knowledge to envision the future and the resources to make it come true. Paxton/Marine Web

  4. Where do we start? • Who are we doing this for? Paxton/Marine Web

  5. Who is our audience? Mariners Paxton/Marine Web

  6. Who is our audience?Pleasure Boaters Paxton/Marine Web

  7. Who is our audience?Commercial Sipping Paxton/Marine Web

  8. Who is our audience? Paxton/Marine Web

  9. Who is our audience?Cruise Ships and Passengers Paxton/Marine Web

  10. Who is our audience?Fishing Industry Paxton/Marine Web

  11. Who is our audience?Water Sports Enthusiasts • Sail Boarders • Kayakers • Swimmers • Surfers Paxton/Marine Web

  12. Dude! Paxton/Marine Web

  13. What are they looking for? • One stop shopping • Easy navigation • Simple detail • Easy to interpret Paxton/Marine Web

  14. What are our goals? • Complementary text and graphics. • To show what is important! Paxton/Marine Web

  15. What is important to Marine interests? • Marine Advisories, Statements, Warnings • SCEC • SCA • Gale • NOW • MWS • SMW ! Paxton/Marine Web

  16. What is important to Marine interests? • Observations • Buoy • CMAN • Land based • Wind • Seas • Weather Paxton/Marine Web

  17. What is important to Marine interests? • Graphical Forecasts • Wind • Wave • Weather Paxton/Marine Web

  18. What is important to Marine interests? • Web Page with easy navigation Paxton/Marine Web

  19. What is important to Marine interests? • Easily readable Text • Table or bullet form • Flags indicate SCEC, SCA, GALE, etc • Wind direction shown as arrow • Weather icons Paxton/Marine Web

  20. What else is important to Marine interests? Paxton/Marine Web

  21. What else is important to Marine interests? Paxton/Marine Web

  22. What else is important to Marine interests? Paxton/Marine Web

  23. What else is important to Marine interests? Paxton/Marine Web

  24. How can we assemble all this into a neat slick package that’s easy to navigate one stop browsing? Paxton/Marine Web

  25. The magic of Flash! • Professional high end vector graphics with: • Animation • Sound • Low bandwidth for fast downloads Paxton/Marine Web

  26. How it’s done: • A Flash generator template is developed and installed on a regional server • WFO’s generate component products using common names • The Flash generator calls those files and incorporates them into a web file. Paxton/Marine Web

  27. Components of the pages…. Paxton/Marine Web

  28. Building upon success • "We have taken your hard work and great ideas and what you have beensuccessful in, and we took it, built upon it and incorporated it all into a universal marine weather page." Paxton/Marine Web

  29. Page Components: Hazards Paxton/Marine Web

  30. Page Components:Observations Paxton/Marine Web

  31. Page Components:GFE Graphics Paxton/Marine Web

  32. Page Components:Forecast Table Paxton/Marine Web

  33. Page Components:Navigation to other sites • Clickable navigation Paxton/Marine Web

  34. Specialized help menus Show Beaufort scale images of what various sea wind and weather combinations look like. Wind speed 48-55 kt, average 52 kt Swell Height (ft) 22 Period (set) 9 Sea Criterion: Very high waves with long overhanging crests. The resulting foam, in great patches, is blown in dense white streaks along the direction of the wind. On the whole, the surface of the sea takes on a white appearance. The tumbling of the sea becomes heavy and shocklike. Visibility affected. Paxton/Marine Web

  35. View Page in Browser Paxton/Marine Web

  36. Paxton/Marine Web

  37. Paxton/Marine Web

  38. Some Comments on the Page… Paxton/Marine Web

  39. Screen Size • Full screen width on a 600x800 display. • Vertical length kept as short as possible • No Scrolling for important information • Watch, warning advisory • Observations • Graphical and text forecasts. • Current usability studies indicate users have grown accustomed to scrolling down • This does not hold true with horizontal scrolling, thus the page width was kept within the screen. Paxton/Marine Web

  40. Navigation: • Multiple navigation methods for almost every piece of information. • The Hazards map links to a page that displays all hazard information about that zone. • The observation map links to the web page that corresponds to that site (NDBC, PORTS, Mesonet, etc.), thus tying together several different networks into one page. Paxton/Marine Web

  41. Colors • The soft green and tan page colors give a professional look, while not drawing any attention away from the weather information. • Usability studies show that users first ignore the banner, and work their focus outward from the center. • Therefore, the person's eyes will be drawn to the current advisories map -- exactly where we want them during a weather situation. Paxton/Marine Web

  42. Colors • The background colors will probably be changed, along with the 'look' of the page at least once a year. • It is a bigger challenge to make sure our pages stay up with the times, and that means not resting on a single look for too long. • Most usability studies suggest 2 to 3 times per year Paxton/Marine Web

  43. Other Features • Printable version to take on board. • Options include: • html page • plug-in such as Flash • The Flash method renders a much nicer page. • About 5% may not have the plug-in – but it’s free. Paxton/Marine Web

  44. A Work in progress… • Develop a specific 256 color pallet to maximize the look of the page. • Getting a copy of Generator to make png files with slick overlays. $1000 • Developing the actual page to list hazards for a zone. This will be done using a scripting lang. called PHP. This will probably be the easiest thing to do. Paxton/Marine Web

  45. Tides (in progress) • Building tide information into a mySQL database. • Writing a routine to ingest buoy and cman data into mySQL. Paxton/Marine Web

  46. Professionalism • Professionalism is also important for another reason -- trust. • The user experience is greatly affected by the IMPRESSION of professionalism, whether or not it actually exists. Paxton/Marine Web

  47. Professionalism • If the page looks good, they instill greater trust in the information presented, and in the company represented. • A good example of this is Amazon.com, which was a very small company but gave a much different impression through its presentation on the Internet. Paxton/Marine Web

  48. Benefits • These ideas are well-thought out. • This is one complete page to accommodate the customer, everyday. • This page has been tested by the customers - this is what they wanted, asked for, and liked. Paxton/Marine Web

  49. More Benefits • It's a one-stop shop. • It's professional. • Graphics are media ready Paxton/Marine Web

  50. Tip of the… • Template useable for: • Public • Fire Weather • Etc. Paxton/Marine Web

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