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TwitterThe Live Feeds Status page is a simple to navigate webpage that includes a list of the most commonly used Esri live feed services and their respective status. The intent of the page is to provide the user with a summarized view of each service status (e.g., normal or experiencing a performance issue) with the ability to expand one or more status items to view additional details related to service status and performance. The Live Feeds Status page is refreshed every 15 minutes (on the quarter hour).A technical manual that describes the Live Feeds Status page functionality, as well as the specific parameters used to calculate the underlying status codes and associated status messaging displayed on the webpage, is available here: Live Feeds Technical Manual
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Twitterhttps://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/get-know-your-city/open-data#open-data-licence-version-2-0https://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/get-know-your-city/open-data#open-data-licence-version-2-0
Media Advisories, News Releases and Public Service Announcements. RSS (Really Simple Syndication) makes it easy for you to stay up to date with City of Ottawa news. Using an RSS Reader, you can have City of Ottawa content delivered to your own website, desktop reader, or news reader application.
Update Frequency: Daily
Contact: City of Ottawa Media Relations
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TwitterPresents the locations of Assisted Living Facilities for DSHS. The data was geocoded using the The WAMAS address correction and geocoding tool from a 5/1/2019 extraction from the Residential Care Services web application at https://fortress.wa.gov/dshs/adsaapps/lookup/BHAdvLookup.aspx.
Important: DSHS reserves the right to alter, suspend, re-host, or retire this service at any time and without notice. This is a map service that you can use in custom web applications and software products. Your use of this map service in these types of tools forms a dependency on the service definition (available fields, layers, etc.). If you form any dependency on this service, be aware of this significant risk to your purposes. You might consider mitigating your risk by extracting the source data and using it to host your own service in an environment under your control. Typically, DSHS Enterprise GIS staff will provide notification of changes via the Comments RSS capability in ArcGIS Online. You should subscribe to this RSS feed to monitor change notifications: https://www.arcgis.com/sharing/rest/content/items/97b5d108216446a5a0f368b24980d631/comments?f=rss
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TwitterHurricane tracks and positions provide information on where the storm has been, where it is currently located, and where it is predicted to go. Each storm location is depicted by the sustained wind speed, according to the Saffir-Simpson Scale. It should be noted that the Saffir-Simpson Scale only applies to hurricanes in the Atlantic and Eastern Pacific basins, however all storms are still symbolized using that classification for consistency.Data SourceThis data is provided by NOAA National Hurricane Center (NHC) for the Central+East Pacific and Atlantic, and the Joint Typhoon Warning Center for the West+Central Pacific and Indian basins. For more disaster-related live feeds visit the Disaster Web Maps & Feeds ArcGIS Online Group.Sample DataSee Sample Layer Item for sample data during inactive Hurricane Season!Update FrequencyThe Aggregated Live Feeds methodology checks the Source for updates every 15 minutes. Tropical cyclones are normally issued every six hours at 5:00 AM EDT, 11:00 AM EDT, 5:00 PM EDT, and 11:00 PM EDT (or 4:00 AM EST, 10:00 AM EST, 4:00 PM EST, and 10:00 PM EST).Public advisories for Eastern Pacific tropical cyclones are normally issued every six hours at 2:00 AM PDT, 8:00 AM PDT, 2:00 PM PDT, and 8:00 PM PDT (or 1:00 AM PST, 7:00 AM PST, 1:00 PM PST, and 7:00 PM PST).Intermediate public advisories may be issued every 3 hours when coastal watches or warnings are in effect, and every 2 hours when coastal watches or warnings are in effect and land-based radars have identified a reliable storm center. Additionally, special public advisories may be issued at any time due to significant changes in warnings or in a cyclone. For the NHC data source you can subscribe to RSS Feeds.North Pacific and North Indian Ocean tropical cyclone warnings are updated every 6 hours, and South Indian and South Pacific Ocean tropical cyclone warnings are routinely updated every 12 hours. Times are set to Zulu/UTC.Scale/ResolutionThe horizontal accuracy of these datasets is not stated but it is important to remember that tropical cyclone track forecasts are subject to error, and that the effects of a tropical cyclone can span many hundreds of miles from the center.Area CoveredWorldGlossaryForecast location: Represents the official NHC forecast locations for the center of a tropical cyclone. Forecast center positions are given for projections valid 12, 24, 36, 48, 72, 96, and 120 hours after the forecast's nominal initial time. Click here for more information.
Forecast points from the JTWC are valid 12, 24, 36, 48 and 72 hours after the forecast’s initial time.Forecast track: This product aids in the visualization of an NHC official track forecast, the forecast points are connected by a red line. The track lines are not a forecast product, as such, the lines should not be interpreted as representing a specific forecast for the location of a tropical cyclone in between official forecast points. It is also important to remember that tropical cyclone track forecasts are subject to error, and that the effects of a tropical cyclone can span many hundreds of miles from the center. Click here for more information.The Cone of Uncertainty: Cyclone paths are hard to predict with absolute certainty, especially days in advance.
The cone represents the probable track of the center of a tropical cyclone and is formed by enclosing the area swept out by a set of circles along the forecast track (at 12, 24, 36 hours, etc). The size of each circle is scaled so that two-thirds of the historical official forecast errors over a 5-year sample fall within the circle. Based on forecasts over the previous 5 years, the entire track of a tropical cyclone can be expected to remain within the cone roughly 60-70% of the time. It is important to note that the area affected by a tropical cyclone can extend well beyond the confines of the cone enclosing the most likely track area of the center. Click here for more information. Now includes 'Danger Area' Polygons from JTWC, detailing US Navy Ship Avoidance Area when Wind speeds exceed 34 Knots!Coastal Watch/Warning: Coastal areas are placed under watches and warnings depending on the proximity and intensity of the approaching storm.Tropical Storm Watch is issued when a tropical cyclone containing winds of 34 to 63 knots (39 to 73 mph) or higher poses a possible threat, generally within 48 hours. These winds may be accompanied by storm surge, coastal flooding, and/or river flooding. The watch does not mean that tropical storm conditions will occur. It only means that these conditions are possible.Tropical Storm Warning is issued when sustained winds of 34 to 63 knots (39 to 73 mph) or higher associated with a tropical cyclone are expected in 36 hours or less. These winds may be accompanied by storm surge, coastal flooding, and/or river flooding.Hurricane Watch is issued when a tropical cyclone containing winds of 64 knots (74 mph) or higher poses a possible threat, generally within 48 hours. These winds may be accompanied by storm surge, coastal flooding, and/or river flooding. The watch does not mean that hurricane conditions will occur. It only means that these conditions are possible.Hurricane Warning is issued when sustained winds of 64 knots (74 mph) or higher associated with a tropical cyclone are expected in 36 hours or less. These winds may be accompanied by storm surge, coastal flooding, and/or river flooding. A hurricane warning can remain in effect when dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and exceptionally high waves continue, even though winds may be less than hurricane force.RevisionsMar 13, 2025: Altered 'Forecast Error Cone' layer to include 'Danger Area' with updated symbology.Nov 20, 2023: Added Event Label to 'Forecast Position' layer, showing arrival time and wind speed localized to user's location.Mar 27, 2022: Added UID, Max_SS, Max_Wind, Max_Gust, and Max_Label fields to ForecastErrorCone layer.This map is provided for informational purposes and is not monitored 24/7 for accuracy and currency. Always refer to NOAA or JTWC sources for official guidance.If you would like to be alerted to potential issues or simply see when this Service will update next, please visit our Live Feed Status Page!
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TwitterInformation Security Category 1 - Public InformationDSHS ALTSA Area Agency on Aging (AAA) | Washington Association of Area Agencies on AgingAAAs were established under the Federal Older Americans Act in 1973 to help older adults (60 or older) remain in their home. AAAs are located throughout the United States and are available in every county within Washington State.AAA's help older adults plan and find additional care, services, or programs. Help can range from getting services for a frail adult so he or she can remain at home to providing access to activities and socialization through programs like senior centers. They also provide support and services to the family or friends helping to care for older adults.Tribal AAA Planning Service Area boundaries are defined using United States Census Bureau's updated 2017 American Indian Area boundaries. Non-Tribal AAA Planning Service Area boundaries are defined by subtracting the 2017 American Indian Area boundaries from the 2010 Census County boundaries for Washington State.Important: DSHS reserves the right to alter, suspend, re-host, or retire this service at any time and without notice. This is a map service that you can use in custom web applications and software products. Your use of this map service in these types of tools forms a dependency on the service definition (available fields, layers, etc.). If you form any dependency on this service, be aware of this significant risk to your purposes. You might consider mitigating your risk by extracting the source data and using it to host your own service in an environment under your control. Typically, DSHS Enterprise GIS staff will provide notification of changes via the Comments RSS capability in ArcGIS Online. You should subscribe to this RSS feed to monitor change notifications: https://www.arcgis.com/sharing/rest/content/items/0b2363ca53874a93865ff57782ca3dcf/comments?f=rss
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Twitterhttps://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/get-know-your-city/open-data#open-data-licence-version-2-0https://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/get-know-your-city/open-data#open-data-licence-version-2-0
RSS Feeds of library programs by branch and category, blog posts by category and media releases. Available in both French and English. Note - This is not a dataset to download, this is an RRS feed.
Accuracy:
There are no known issues with the data.
Update Frequency: N/A - always most current data
Contact: Chris Simmons - OPL
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TwitterAs part of BOREAS, the RSS-15 team conducted an investigation using SIR-C , X-SAR and Landsat TM data for estimating total above-ground dry biomass for the SSA and NSA modeling grids and component biomass for the SSA. Relationships of backscatter to total biomass and total biomass to foliage, branch, and bole biomass were used to estimate biomass density across the landscape. The procedure involved image classification with SAR and Landsat TM data and development of simple mapping techniques using combinations of SAR channels. For the SSA, the SIR-C data used were acquired on 06-Oct-1994, and the Landsat TM data used were acquired on September 2, 1995. The maps of the NSA were developed from SIR-C data acquired on 13-Apr-1994.
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Twitterhttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontariohttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontario
The Ontario Watershed Boundaries (OWB) collection represents the authoritative watershed boundaries for Ontario. The data is based on a framework similar to the Atlas of Canada Fundamental Drainage Areas and the United States Watershed Boundary Dataset, however it adopts a more stringent scientific approach to watershed delineation. The Ontario Watershed Boundaries (OWB) collection includes five data classes:OWB Main (OWB) (Download: Shapefile | File Geodatabase | Open Data Service | QGIS Layer )all watershed levels from primary to quaternary, and level 5 and 6 watersheds for select areas of the province;OWB Primary (OWBPRIM) (Download: SHP | FGDB | ODS | QLR-Diverted Flow | QLR-Natural Flow)all primary watersheds or major drainage areas (WSCMDA) in the Canadian classification;OWB Secondary (OWBSEC) (Download: SHP | FGDB | ODS | QLR*)all secondary watersheds or sub drainage areas (WSCSDA);OWB Tertiary (OWBTERT) (Download: SHP | FGDB | ODS | QLR*)all tertiary watersheds or sub-sub drainage areas (WSCSSDA);OWB Quaternary (OWBQUAT) (Download: SHP | FGDB | ODS | QLR)all quaternary watersheds or 6-digit drainage areas (WSC6).*Display issues in QGIS are currently being investigated for these services. See the RSS feed below for details.IMPORTANT NOTE: The OWB data replaces the following data classes:Provincial Watersheds, HistoricalAdditional DocumentationUser Guide for Ontario Watershed Boundaries (Word)Watershed Delineation Principles and Guidelines for Ontario (Word) Atlas of Canada 1,000,000 National Frameworks Data, Hydrology - Fundamental Drainage Areas United States Geological Survey Watershed Boundary Dataset (Website)
Status Completed: Production of the data has been completed
Maintenance and Update Frequency Irregular: data is updated in intervals that are uneven in duration - usually after the completion of major updates to source data (e.g. OIH), but could also include spot updates and expansion of the dataset over time based on user needs. RSS FeedFollow our feed to get the latest announcements and developments concerning our watersheds. Visit our feed at the bottom of our ArcGIS Online OWB page.
Contact Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources - Geospatial Ontario, geospatial@ontario.ca
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The Provincial Digital Elevation Model (PDEM) is a general-purpose dataset designed to represent true ground elevation where possible and is based on best-available data across the province. This dataset has not been conditioned for any specific application. Please see the User Guide below for more information. Zoom in on the map and click your area of interest to determine which package(s) you require for download. Now also available through a web service which exposes the data for visualization and geoprocessing. The service is best accessed through the ArcGIS REST API, either directly or by setting up an ArcGIS server connection using the REST endpoint URL. The service draws using the Web Mercator projection. For more information on what functionality is available and how to work with the service, read the Ontario Web Raster Services User Guide. If you have questions about how to use the service, email Geospatial Ontario (GEO) at geospatial@ontario.ca. Service Endpointshttps://ws.geoservices.lrc.gov.on.ca/arcgis5/rest/services/Elevation/Ontario_Provincial_DEM/ImageServer https://intra.ws.geoservices.lrc.gov.on.ca/arcgis5/rest/services/Elevation/Ontario_Provincial_DEM/ImageServer (Government of Ontario Internal Users)Additional DocumentationProvincial Digital Elevation Model - User Guide (Word) Provincial Digital Elevation Model - Methods and Processes (Word) Updating Provincial Elevation Data Using Least Cost Path Analysis (Word) Provincial Digital Elevation Model - Boundary in shape file format (Shapefile) OBM Photo Block Index (Zip file) PDEM Spatial Metadata Index (Elevation Source) - August 11th, 2025 (Zip file) Product PackagesProvincial Digital Elevation Model -North (CGVD28) Provincial Digital Elevation Model - South (CGVD28) Provincial Digital Elevation Model - North (CGVD2013)Provincial Digital Elevation Model - South (CGVD2013)StatusOn going: Data is continually being updated Maintenance and Update Frequency As needed: Data is updated as deemed necessary RSS FeedFollow our feed to get the latest announcements and developments concerning our PDEM product. Visit our feed at the bottom of our ArcGIS Online PDEM page. Contact Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources - Geospatial Ontario, geospatial@ontario.ca
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TwitterAttribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
License information was derived automatically
Upcoming Logan City library events RSS Feed.
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TwitterThis data set provides the spatial distributions of vegetation types, geobotanical characteristics, and physiographic features for the Arctic tundra region of Alaska for the period 1993-2005. Specific attributes include dominant vegetation, bioclimate subzones, floristic subprovinces, landscape types, lake coverage, and substrate chemistry. This data set generally includes areas North and West of the forest boundary and excludes areas that have a boreal flora such as the Aleutian Islands and alpine tundra regions south of treeline.
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TwitterDSHS and the state Health Care Authority (HCA) jointly designated Regional Service Areas (RSAs) in June 2015, following legislative authorization in 2014. RSAs define new geographical boundaries for the state to purchase behavioral and physical health care through managed care contracts. They are not administrative authorities. Behavioral Health Organizations (BHOs) are located within newly formed Regional Service Areas (RSAs). There is one BHO per RSA, except for the Southwest Washington RSA, which has a contract with the Health Care Authority for managed care plans. RSAs join and include contiguous counties, contain at least 60,000 people on Medicaid, possess an adequate number of health care providers, and reflect natural physical and behavioral health service referral patterns. More information on BHOs is available at this link (https://www.dshs.wa.gov/bha/division-behavioral-health-and-recovery/behavioral-health-organizations).Lifecycle status: ProductionPurpose: enable open access to DSHS dataDSHS Data Security: Category 1 - PublicLast Update: 7/7/2016Update Cycle: as neededData Sources: DSHSImportant: DSHS reserves the right to alter, suspend, re-host, or retire this service at any time and without notice. This is a map service that you can use in custom web applications and software products. Your use of this map service in these types of tools forms a dependency on the service definition (available fields, layers, etc.). If you form any dependency on this service, be aware of this significant risk to your purposes. You might consider mitigating your risk by extracting the source data and using it to host your own service in an environment under your control. Typically, DSHS Enterprise GIS staff will provide notification of changes via the "Comments" RSS capability in ArcGIS Online. You may subscribe to the RSS feed that publishes comments to monitor any planned and notified changes.
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Twitterhttps://open.niagarafalls.ca/pages/terms-of-usehttps://open.niagarafalls.ca/pages/terms-of-use
This is an RSS Feed containing the current Public Notices listed on the City of Niagara Falls website.https://niagarafalls.ca/rss/public-notices.xml
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Twitterhttps://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/get-know-your-city/open-data#open-data-licence-version-2-0https://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/get-know-your-city/open-data#open-data-licence-version-2-0
RSS Feeds of library programs by branch and category, blog posts by category and media releases. Available in both French and English. URL: http://biblioottawalibrary.ca/en/events-feed Accuracy: There are no known issues with the data.
Update Frequency: As needed
Contact: Chris Simmons
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TwitterThis map displays the observed path, forecast track, and intensity of tropical cyclone activity (hurricanes, typhoons, cyclones) from the National Hurricane Center (NHC) and Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC), and is also available to view in a simple web application as well as the HurricaneAware app.SummaryHurricane tracks and positions provide information on where the storm has been, where it is currently located, and where it is predicted to go. Each storm location is depicted by the sustained wind speed, according to the Saffir-Simpson Scale. It should be noted that the JTWC does not use the Saffir-Simpson Scale for cyclones and typhoons in the Pacific basin, however the storms are still symbolized using that classification for consistency.Data Source This data is provided by NOAA National Hurricane Center (NHC) for the East Pacific and Atlantic, and the Joint Typhoon Warning Center for the West Pacific and Indian basins. Forecast location: Represents the official NHC forecast locations for the center of a tropical cyclone. Forecast center positions are given for projections valid 12, 24, 36, 48, 72, 96, and 120 hours after the forecast's nominal initial time.Forecast points from the JTWC are valid 12, 24, 36, 48 and 72 hours after the forecast’s initial time.Forecast track: This product aids in the visualization of an NHC official track forecast, the forecast points are connected by a red line. The track lines are not a forecast product, as such, the lines should not be interpreted as representing a specific forecast for the location of a tropical cyclone in between official forecast points. It is also important to remember that tropical cyclone track forecasts are subject to error, and that the effects of a tropical cyclone can span many hundreds of miles from the center.The Cone of Uncertainty: Cyclone paths are hard to predict with absolute certainty, especially days in advance.The cone represents the probable track of the center of a tropical cyclone, and is formed by enclosing the area swept out by a set of circles along the forecast track (at 12, 24, 36 hours, etc). The size of each circle is set so that two-thirds of the historical official forecast errors over a 5-year sample fall within the circle. Based on forecasts over the previous 5 years, the entire track of a tropical cyclone can be expected to remain within the cone roughly 60-70% of the time. It is important to note that the area affected by a tropical cyclone can extend well beyond the confines of the cone enclosing the most likely track area of the center.Coastal Watch/Warning: Coastal areas are placed under watches and warnings depending on the proximity and intensity of the approaching storm. Tropical Storm Watch is issued when a tropical cyclone containing winds of 34 to 63 knots (39 to 73 mph) or higher poses a possible threat, generally within 48 hours. These winds may be accompanied by storm surge, coastal flooding, and/or river flooding. The watch does not mean that tropical storm conditions will occur. It only means that these conditions are possible.Tropical Storm Warning is issued when sustained winds of 34 to 63 knots (39 to 73 mph) or higher associated with a tropical cyclone are expected in 36 hours or less. These winds may be accompanied by storm surge, coastal flooding, and/or river flooding.Hurricane Watch is issued when a tropical cyclone containing winds of 64 knots (74 mph) or higher poses a possible threat, generally within 48 hours. These winds may be accompanied by storm surge, coastal flooding, and/or river flooding. The watch does not mean that hurricane conditions will occur. It only means that these conditions are possible.Hurricane Warning is issued when sustained winds of 64 knots (74 mph) or higher associated with a tropical cyclone are expected in 36 hours or less. These winds may be accompanied by storm surge, coastal flooding, and/or river flooding. A hurricane warning can remain in effect when dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and exceptionally high waves continue, even though winds may be less than hurricane force.Source: https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/gis/ (NHC) and https://www.prh.noaa.gov/hnl/cphc/ (CPHC) https://www.usno.navy.mil/JTWC/ (JTWC)Scale/Resolution: The horizontal accuracy of these datasets is not stated but it is important to remember that tropical cyclone track forecasts are subject to error, and that the effects of a tropical cyclone can span many hundreds of miles from the centerUpdate Frequency: The Aggregated Live Feed Methodology checks the Source for updates every 15 minutes. Tropical cyclones are normally issued every six hours at 5:00 AM EDT, 11:00 AM EDT, 5:00 PM EDT, and 11:00 PM EDT (or 4:00 AM EST, 10:00 AM EST, 4:00 PM EST, and 10:00 PM EST).Public advisories for Eastern Pacific tropical cyclones are normally issued every six hours at 2:00 AM PDT, 8:00 AM PDT, 2:00 PM PDT, and 8:00 PM PDT (or 1:00 AM PST, 7:00 AM PST, 1:00 PM PST, and 7:00 PM PST).Intermediate public advisories may be issued every 3 hours when coastal watches or warnings are in effect, and every 2 hours when coastal watches or warnings are in effect and land-based radars have identified a reliable storm center. Additionally, special public advisories may be issued at any time due to significant changes in warnings or in the cyclone. For the NHC Data Source you can subscribe to RSS Feeds.North Pacific and North Indian Ocean tropical cyclone warnings are updated every 6 hours and South Indian and South Pacific Ocean tropical cyclone warnings are routinely updated every 12 hours. Set to Zulu time.Area Covered: Atlantic / Eastern Pacific (NHC) + Central Pacific Ocean (CPHC) + South & West Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean (JTWC).
This map is provided for informational purposes and is not monitored 24/7 for accuracy and currency. Please always refer to NOAA or JTWC sources for official guidance.This web map is also available to view in a simple web application as well as the HurricaneAware app.
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Twitterhttps://open.niagarafalls.ca/pages/terms-of-usehttps://open.niagarafalls.ca/pages/terms-of-use
An RSS Feed that shows the next 2 weeks worth of events happening in the City of Niagara Falls, Canada. Various types of events are included: arts, culture, nature, business, community, trade shows and conferences, festivals and fundraisers, sports and recreation, and events sponsored by the City. The listing of events is updated on a daily basis.https://niagarafalls.ca/rss/events.xml
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TwitterThis map service depicts the National Weather Service (NWS) watches, warnings, and advisories within the United States.A warning is issued when a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, imminent or likely. A warning means weather conditions pose a threat to life or property. People in the path of the storm need to take protective action.A watch is used when the risk of a hazardous weather or hydrologic event has increased significantly, but its occurrence, location or timing is still uncertain. It is intended to provide enough lead time so those who need to set their plans in motion can do so. A watch means that hazardous weather is possible. People should have a plan of action in case a storm threatens and they should listen for later information and possible warnings especially when planning travel or outdoor activities.An advisory is issued when a hazardous weather or hydrologic event is occurring, imminent or likely. Advisories are for less serious conditions than warnings, that cause significant inconvenience and if caution is not exercised, could lead to situations that may threaten life or property.We automatically check these products for updates every 5 minutes from the NWS Public Alerts. The NWS RSS-CAP Feeds for National and Maritime Statements are parsed using theAggregated Live Feeds methodology to take the returned information and serve the data through ArcGIS Server as a map service. The Overlay data is checked and updated daily from the AWIPS Shapefile Database.
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TwitterThe Live Feeds Status page is a simple to navigate webpage that includes a list of the most commonly used Esri live feed services and their respective status. The intent of the page is to provide the user with a summarized view of each service status (e.g., normal or experiencing a performance issue) with the ability to expand one or more status items to view additional details related to service status and performance. The Live Feeds Status page is refreshed every 15 minutes (on the quarter hour).A technical manual that describes the Live Feeds Status page functionality, as well as the specific parameters used to calculate the underlying status codes and associated status messaging displayed on the webpage, is available here: Live Feeds Technical Manual