An open source project for my Met Office data analyzer
Since some other people have been playing with my little Perl program to analyze the Met Office land surface temperature data, I've registered a project at SourceForge so that others can work with me on it.
I've also imported my latest version of the script which outputs data about the number of stations used to create the gridding data, and does cosine weighting of the northern and southern hemisphere trend data.
It can all be found at Land Surface Temperature Analyzer.
I've also imported my latest version of the script which outputs data about the number of stations used to create the gridding data, and does cosine weighting of the northern and southern hemisphere trend data.
It can all be found at Land Surface Temperature Analyzer.
Labels: climate change, perl, pseudo-randomness
If you enjoyed this blog post, you might enjoy my travel book for people interested in science and technology: The Geek Atlas. Signed copies of The Geek Atlas are available. Looking for a new job? Try UseTheSource.





1 Comments:
sourceforge? how 1990s! ;)
seriously though, I reckon you'd be better off using github, I've found it's got lower overhead for this kind of smallish colloboration, and exposes stuff through the web much more effectively.
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home