Sean in New Orleans wrote:This isn't really directed at the NHC. It's more of making a point, that, in spite of it all, nature STILL has the last call...we've got plenty to learn. I've been leary of computer models ever since they came out...but, they are only a tool. They are not the forecast. The best predictor of what this system is going to do is to do it the old fashioned way...follow the barometric pressure in front of it's movement. Whereever it is dropping faster than other areas (even if it's miniscule), will provide us with the answer of where Katrina is going. The models have obviously been pretty confused for a few days with this one...all you have to do is look at them and see that they are confused...they are making wild, radical changes with each run.
Sorry, but since computer models are my area, I have to rise to their defense every once in a while. You are absolutely right, they are only a tool. But regardless, they are the absolute *backbone* of modern weather forecasting. Without the models, we would literally be back in the old days of the 40s, where the best we could do was predict short range movement of pressure systems by the method you mentioned. The problem is, the very method you are espousing is itself much more rife with potential error and ambiguity than a computer model's output. It is useful for short term correction and validation of a storm's potential track, but by and large, the model's reproduce this kind of information rather well. It is by no stretch of the imagination, the *best* way. While old-fashioned means of forecasting the weather may offer nostalgic and educational value, they are vastly inferior to what we can do now with the *proper* use of computer models.
This doesn't mean that computer models don't have their ups and downs, or perform great on every single storm, but I will tell you this, without them, the NHC (and everyone else) would have even less of a clue about what Katrina is going to do then they do now.
I swear, whenever we get a storm where the computer models are in any kind of disagreement, these kind of comments pop up, and I'm reduced to the role of putting out fires...






