Tomorrow is a weather service — emphasis on the word service — a community of people sharing resources and delivering justice, hope, connection, safety, and resilience in a world in urgent need of systemic action.
Weather that changes the world
Tomorrow is a weather service — emphasis on the word service — a community of people sharing resources and delivering justice, hope, connection, safety, and resilience in a world in urgent need of systemic action.
This is a very smart way for Twitter's Revue to creep into Substack's business model... by focusing on trusted voices who produce content on the regular (let's face it: meteorologists don't get snow days!). This is also a smart foray into owned content for Twitter , which heretofore has only partnered with content generators, not sponsored native content a la Medium, etc.
Huh? What is the product? I don’t get it. A new weather.com and that’s focused on “climate injustice”? Sounds like a beat from a news site not a product you pay $10 a month for. Not trying to be a hater here, but it feels like a Silicon Valley bit. Change the world with, a… checks notes… weather newsletter.
Color me intrigued. Signed up for the free newsletter to give it a spin.
As it seems "Tomorrow" developed into "Currently": https://www.currentlyhq.com/about
There is no product :/ Twitter @tomorrow account doesn't exist and also tmrw.is domain is not claimed. Insteresting situation :?
Check the similar products section on this page, or browse the category pages linked in the tags above. Each category page shows all products for a given year, sorted by engagement.
A measure of community engagement at launch. Higher means more people noticed and interacted with the product. It's a traction signal, not a quality rating.
Discussion threads divided by interest score. Above 0.30 is strong. Below 0.15 suggests the product got clicks but not conversation.
Categories come from the product's launch tags. Most products appear in 2-3 categories. The primary category is listed first.