Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Consider lower-cost weather APIs #1

Open
tdulcet opened this issue Jun 14, 2019 · 1 comment
Open

Consider lower-cost weather APIs #1

tdulcet opened this issue Jun 14, 2019 · 1 comment

Comments

@tdulcet
Copy link

tdulcet commented Jun 14, 2019

Is there a technical reason that a paid Rebble subscription is necessary to get the weather?

There are plenty of free weather APIs, including OpenWeatherMap and Yahoo Weather. OpenWeatherMap will even remove access limits for open source applications (see under "For FOSS developers").

The sun rise/set times can also be calculated directly with open source libraries, including SunCalc, MeeusJs and the Sun and moon rise/set project.

I created a simple webpage here to compare the output of these free weather APIs and sun rise/set libraries.

Would Rebble be open to providing the weather for free to all users? I would love to have the weather again in my timeline, but for me it is not worth $3 a month since I have the original Pebble Classic without dictation support or the weather app.

Edit: It seems that Rebble is paying up to $520,000 a year for IBM's Weather API!

@jwise
Copy link
Contributor

jwise commented Jun 14, 2019

The paid subscription, in part, pays for the cost of the "paid" services -- weather and dictation -- but it also goes to cover the cost of running the free services (AWS is expensive!), and the cost of maintaining the services. I definitely appreciate the pointers to lower-cost services, and I'll have a look at some point in the future -- but we think that $3/month is a great value that pays for weather, dictation, and keeping the Rebble project sustainable into the future! (Maciej Cegłowski wrote a nice tongue-in-cheek piece about this, too.)

@jwise jwise changed the title Provide the Weather for free Consider lower-cost weather APIs Jun 14, 2019
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

2 participants