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So where do these cloud images come from?
The cloud images are provided by the Dundee UK Satellite tracking station. They provide five images which
together cover the globe. In their raw from, these images are of course half-hemispheres and thus, circles.
The images are assembled into a single flat map by the open-source, volunteer xplanet
project run by CalTech graduate Hari Nair and distributed to a number of mirror sites.
The composite image can then be accessed by programs like EarthDesk for free. EarthDesk selects a random mirror each time it needs to update the clouds.
Many other applications use the same list of mirrors. The goal is to distribute network traffic to help reduce bandwidth on individual servers.
It also reduces the burden on the Dundee UK Satellite Station as only one site is pulling back the images every three hours.
By keeping bandwidth to a minimum, it is hoped that this free data service can continue indefinitely.
Corrupt images...
Sometimes, for a number of resons, a corrupt cloud image can be generated, it almost always corrects itself on the next update, three hours later.
Many thanks to Mr. Hari Nair for offering and supporting this service!
Trygve Inda
President
Xeric Design, Ltd.
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