There is still an SA RASP running on my server:

http://users.on.net/~dsg/HG/RASPtable.html

Dave


On 8 Sep 2017 11:26 PM, "Mark Newton" <new...@atdot.dotat.org> wrote:

> On 7 Sep 2017, at 4:11 PM, Rob Wintulich <r...@signwizard.com.au> wrote:
>
> Yes, I care and I also love that particular RASP facility.
> My understanding is that someone appropriately informed and willing needs
> to service an area to keep it up and running.  Mark Newton may be someone
> who might be able to inform us better!?!
>
>
> Nah, I’m the temp trace guy, not the RASP guy.
>
> The temp trace site is still ingesting data, and still running. I haven’t
> looked at the logs recently to see how often it’s being used, but as long
> as data is available it’s still able to work.
>
> Data is less available than it used to be. In 2004, Peter Temple organized
> a free account with the Bureau of Meteorology for the raw data on each of
> the temp trace sites. They shut that down a couple of years ago. We got ten
> years out of it for free, but they didn’t want to continue it without
> billing about $2500 per annum to keep it alive, and the availability of
> RASP and Matt Scutter’s experimentation with SkySight suggested to me that
> maybe that wasn’t a good investment.
>
> Consequently, I switched the data ingestion back to University of
> Wyoming’s Upper Air Project, which gets the same BoM data I used to get,
> but with a delay of about an hour. That’s why the traces aren’t as early
> each morning as they used to be.
>
> My site has stored every single sounding datapoint it has ingested for the
> last 14 years. The sounding data table in the database has about 22 million
> rows. Nearly a decade and a half of several-times-per-day data for has
> proved to be a useful resource to some people: I’ve been asked to make
> extracts available to climate science departments at a couple of
> universities, and the data has informed some PhD projects.
>
> I reckon the hang glider folks still use it too. I occasionally get
> questions or attaboys from them.
>
> The best bit is that it’s required almost no maintenance, so I’m happy to
> let it sit on my server more or less forever. I wrote the software in the
> first half of the last decade, and except for a few small updates to cope
> with data provider changes and a couple of week-long outages when I’ve
> moved house, it’s run on autopilot ever since. I wish every software
> project I did was as reliable as this one :-D
>
> For the real die-hards (or moneyed,) a lot of folk are migrating to
> subscription services like Matthew Scutter’s SkySight which offer even more
> than ‘common’ old RASP, but for old hacks like myself who just want to be
> able to pick out the  regular good days each season, RASP is great.  If the
> task of maintenance is not too onerous I’d be happy to keep an eye on it,
> but I would need guidance and assistance initially to get me ‘installed’
>
>
> Honestly, I’d recommend SkySight. Not just because it’s empirically
> excellent, but also because the gliding community is so small that useful
> facilities can only continue to be provided if people who need them support
> them.
>
> Matthew’s trying to make a living out of SkySight.io. He’ll be motivated
> to keep it “good” as long as the money tap doesn’t dry up so much that he
> has to get a real job instead :-)
>
>     - mark
>
>
>
>
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