A.M. Weather

http://dbpedia.org/resource/A.M._Weather an entity of type: Thing

A.M. Weather was an American weather news program that ran from October 30, 1978 to February 3, 1995. and was broadcast on PBS member stations throughout the United States. The 15-minute daily program, which aired fifteen minutes before or after the hour (depending on the station's scheduling of the program) and was produced by Maryland Public Television (MPT, or before 1984 the Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting), featured detailed forecasts presented by meteorologists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). While many other media outlets embraced computer weather maps and graphics in the 1980s for weather forecasting use, A.M. Weather held back on fully embracing computer graphics until 1991, although they did adapt to such graphics for satellite and radar m rdf:langString
rdf:langString A.M. Weather
xsd:integer 26601762
xsd:integer 1082860797
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString Jimm Revelle
rdf:langString Lori Evans
xsd:date 1978-10-30
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Aviation Weather
rdf:langString Carl Weiss, Joan von Ahn, Wayne Winston, et al
rdf:langString Dorothy Peterson, Kay Bond
<second> 900.0
rdf:langString Don Barto
rdf:langString Mark Roumelis
rdf:langString A.M. Weather was an American weather news program that ran from October 30, 1978 to February 3, 1995. and was broadcast on PBS member stations throughout the United States. The 15-minute daily program, which aired fifteen minutes before or after the hour (depending on the station's scheduling of the program) and was produced by Maryland Public Television (MPT, or before 1984 the Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting), featured detailed forecasts presented by meteorologists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). While many other media outlets embraced computer weather maps and graphics in the 1980s for weather forecasting use, A.M. Weather held back on fully embracing computer graphics until 1991, although they did adapt to such graphics for satellite and radar maps in the late 1980s. The show's trademark yellow pointer was a mainstay of the program entire run.
<minute> 15.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5256
xsd:date 1978-10-30
xsd:double 900.0

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