contest
WeatherBug Celebrating 100 Million Downloads With Contest
WeatherBug’s parent company, Earth Networks is excited to share the news of 100 million downloads with a rather exciting contest that I think will be of interest to those here that follow the latest WeatherBug happenings. Rather than merely offering a raffle however, WeatherBug has decided that they’re looking to have fans of the Windows desktop WeatherBug [...]
WeatherBug API Winners Announced
The WeatherBug API contest has been a tremendous success. We had so many entries submitted that even after we have reviewed and judged each of them, I am still working to get each of them posted here at Inside WeatherBug. Having said this, if you find that you did not win this time around, you [...]
AirMe – WeatherBug API Entry
With Apple’s latest iPhone release, the new iPhone App Store has been all the rage. Well as it turns out, one of our entries to the WeatherBug API Contest was an iPhone application that not only adds a whole new dimension to uploading photos to Flickr, it does so while providing a tag relating to [...]
WeatherCurve – WeatherBug API Entry
As the WeatherBug API contest begins to come to a close, I am still playing catch up with all of the entries. While they have all been reviewed, getting them posted here has proven to be a real race to finish line – this is great by the way! In this blog posting, I am [...]
WeatherBug Eclipse Plug-in – WeatherBug API Entry
The Eclipse IDE environment is an up and coming development environment which aspires to become an open source alternative to Microsoft’s .NET. Recently a new WeatherBug API contest entry came rolling in that took Java Development Kit 1.4 under Eclipse 3.2 and built a weather plugin that is both impressive and versatile. This Eclipse plugin [...]
PHP WeatherBug Wrapper – WeatherBug API Entry
Today we have yet another PHP entry for the WeatherBug API contest going on right now. This PHP related entry is called the PHP WeatherBug Wrapper. This PHP application allows its users to take the existing wrapper and then build their own frontend for it, possibly to be used on their own web server. One [...]






