Yes–elementary school (K-3) in Illinois, early 1990s. I was crap at it. We also had gymnastics rings.
I’m pretty sure none of the other schools I went to had ropes or rings in the gym, used or not.
Yes–elementary school (K-3) in Illinois, early 1990s. I was crap at it. We also had gymnastics rings.
I’m pretty sure none of the other schools I went to had ropes or rings in the gym, used or not.
I guess it’s not actually a widget, it’s a silent notification (that shows current conditions plus hourly if you expand it). The actual hourly forecast in the app is like that too, but since you can see the percentage chance of precipitation, it’s less annoying. I switched from the Norwegian Met Office to the NWS in the hopes Norway was just rubbish at forecasting the US, but it’s the same–it’s how Weawow maps the forecast data to icons.
I’d take a screenshot, but unbelievably Weawow doesn’t think it’s going to rain today.
The one thing that bugs me about Weawow is that the logic for when to display rain or thunderstorms in the widget is way wrong. It seems to show the rain or thunderstorm icon at the slightest possibility of precipitation.
I believe the Norwegian weather service (which is the default option, IIRC) does worldwide forecasting.
Twitter had the Arab Spring as this odd formative event, where it suddenly became a source of news information. I think it’s really hard to know how Twitter would have developed without that.
I’m probably five years younger than you. We had rope climbing but it wasn’t part of the Presidential Physical Fitness Award (which I am seemingly deeply proud of actually having managed in the third grade, despite being crap at pull ups, and I was even worse at rope climbing).