Current location temperature

  1. How Can I Add Outside Temperature to my Windows PC Taskbar?
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Download: Current location temperature
Size: 50.12 MB

How Can I Add Outside Temperature to my Windows PC Taskbar?

Surprisingly, the Microsoft Windows Weather app offers a beautiful interface to this important information, but somehow doesn’t offer the ability to show the temperature directly on the Taskbar. You could just leave it open on your Desktop, of course, but then it’s cluttering up the screen for a single digit you want to view now and again, so that’s not super efficient. Years ago I wrote about using an app called Weatherbug to accomplish this task – Fortunately there’s an alternative third party weather app from The Weather Channel called WeatherEye. Would I rather have something directly from Microsoft so I know there’s nothing worrying about the app? Definitely. Is that available? Not at this time. So a third party app it is. In this case, WeatherEye is available through Softonics as a free download, but let’s see what’s available first, in case you decide you’ll live with the current situation. To start out, my Taskbar, sans weather information: I have the date and time, why can’t I have the weather too? Crazy, man. As you pointed out, you can indeed just jump over to the Start menu: Well, it doesn’t show thee current temperature, just the forecast for today: A low of 41F and a high of 83F. Quite a temperature variation, actually, but that’s another story! You can actually pin the weather app to your Taskbar, as it happens… But that’s just a shortcut to the weather app with no information shown (the rightmost icon): So what’s a weather nut to do? Install WeatherEye. To ...

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With this temperature at altitude calculator, you can easily find an approximation of the temperature 🌡 at any given altitude. Have you ever wondered what the temperature at cruising altitude is? ✈ Or why does temperature decrease with higher altitude? Then, we have the perfect tool for you! In a few paragraphs, we will answer all those questions and more. We will also give you some examples while showing and explaining the temperature vs. altitude chart. Keep reading to learn more! Most people think that the higher you go within Earth's atmosphere, the colder it gets. Well, they're right... kind of. In reality, the atmosphere is a complex thermodynamic system that needs constant monitoring through satellite or radar information to produce accurate predictions. One of the models describing Earth's atmosphere is the ISA, International Standard Atmosphere model, which utilizes geopotential altitude to obtain the temperature. According to this model, temperature either increases, decreases, or remains constant as you climb up in the atmosphere, contrary to pressure, which only decreases with higher altitude as well as air density (check our Why use geopotential altitude? Geopotential altitude is used instead of geometric altitude (distance above a surface) because gravity on Earth is not exactly the same everywhere. It varies with height (Newton's law of gravity), latitude (due to centrifugal forces), longitude (uneven distribution of Earth's mass), and some other parameters....