I'm something of a cloud-enjoyer. If you're interested in learning more about clouds I'd recommend the international cloud atlas website.
https://cloudatlas.wmo.int/en/home.html
When I moved from the Bay Area to Austin, the first thing I realized: I missed seeing Cumulus clouds, which I saw a lot growing up in the midwest. Bay Area either has blue skies or Cirrus clouds, but never did see Cumulus clouds there.
I'm something of a cloud-enjoyer. If you're interested in learning more about clouds I'd recommend the international cloud atlas website. https://cloudatlas.wmo.int/en/home.html
Personal top three clouds:
- Nacreous clouds
- Altocumulus lenticularis
- Cirrus homogenitus (what a name)
I'm something of a cloud enjoyer myself. See also https://cloudappreciationsociety.org/
I have visited this here and there for the past 20+ years.
https://www.cloudman.com
…and now I've learned something new today:
https://cloudatlas.wmo.int/en/fog-bow.html
When I moved from the Bay Area to Austin, the first thing I realized: I missed seeing Cumulus clouds, which I saw a lot growing up in the midwest. Bay Area either has blue skies or Cirrus clouds, but never did see Cumulus clouds there.
finally something relaxing. nothing about AI or a reminder for myself to start another project with some new fancy method, no politics.
Thank you
And don't worry, each type of cloud is already owned and trademarked years ago, you're not missing out on altocumulus.co.uk or whatever
And you can look outside to see your local version of it. And, it updates frequently!
Ironic!
Can these clouds be predicted from physics?
In opus 4.8 they can
They can be predicted from a small device you can buy at a smoke shop