"F@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@" Re: tfurrows & ~@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@P~ solderpunk _g@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@F` o aaaaah j@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@RF~ \|/ $@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@/\ | S T O R M J@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@F~ /--\ /\ S T U F F "@@@@@@@@@@@@@P~ |__| @@@@@@@@@@@F` "5@@@@@@@@@_ `?@@@@@@@@@@$y_ `~RR@@@@@@@@g_ "~FF@@@@@ `@@@ `RF tfurrows and solderpunk recently phlogged about the storm system that passed through the USA and caused a bunch of tornadoes. The worst of that thankfully messed our little town, but things were still dicey even just a little bit outside of town and in nearby smaller towns, townships/counties/villages/etc... That day I happened to have my new p25 radio setup going, slurping in all of the radio traffic from all of the talkgroups on multiple trunked radio systems in parallel, and that radio traffic actually turned out a lot more interesting than it usually is. There is a lot of preparedness and people getting busy as these types of storms come in happening that most people don't know about. All of the counties surrounding a particular NWS office have their own 'EOC' (Emergency Operations Center) - All of the spotters report to their EOC's and the EOC's in turn report back to the local NWS office over the radio. I managed to capture all of this traffic, which was neat. Not so neat are some of the reports you start hearing pretty soon in, first about hail, damage, but soon forming funnel clouds and actual tornadoes touching down left and right, which I must admit was a bit unnerving to listen to as the storm got closer. At one point, a tornado formed near the town just north of ours and for a moment things were looking like the town was about to get hit, but thankfully instead it went just north of the town; but not before first crossing the interstate, and knocking over a tour bus and a few semi's, and a bunch of powerlines. You could hear the frustration of emergency responders as they could not get near the bus due to downed powerlines on the interstate. Anyway, I zipped up all of the audio of that day and uploaded it here so you can listen to it too! gopher://gopher.linkerror.com/9/radio/recordings/2023_03_31_storm.zip The filenames start with the talkgroup id followed by the timestamp of the recording. For example: 9021-1680324909_855162500-call_4036.m4a would be tgid: 9021 and timestamp: 1680324909 Standard unix timestamp, you should be able to convert it to human- readable text with the date command, eg: > date -d @1680324909 Fri Mar 31 11:55:09 PM CDT 2023 (note the @ prefix) Anyway, the talk group for the local NWS (in Lincoln IL) is 30324, so if you just want to listen to only those, assuming mpv as your audio player, you could just do: mpv 30324-* If you want to get a more complete picture and listen to >EVERYTHING< in order, then you will have to strip the talkgroup id prefixes off of the filenames first and then just run `mpv *.m4a` - I kept all the chatter in of various police departments, local gas company, EMS, DOT and so on, so you can get a complete idea of the storm impact, but obviously there's also going to be a lot of non-storm irrelevant chat going on if you listen this way, although it'd give a more realistic overview. Anyway, it kind of sounds like that the way things are looking, we're about to get more similar weather here soonish. *quietly hums the duck and cover song*