I'm really glad those headlines are highlighted now, and I like seeing the changing weather conditions within a period. However, dual icons with no space between them will be a problem until the public becomes familiar with it. There is a learning curve with recognizing the new icons and combinations that may occur within a period, but I'm going to help you all now. Here is a "before" and "after" page of the NWS icons based on all possible conditions that any METAR report could show along with any forecasts that could be made:
http://innovation.srh.noaa.gov/newicons/icons.html
Thanks for providing that link, Patrick. I actually didn't know some of those icons existed, like the tornado and funnel cloud ones. I wonder if an ASOS station has ever been able to report a tornado at the exact time the hourly observation was taken to display that icon?
Regardless of whether they do the split-icon thing and the highlighting of the alerts in effect, I really think they should switch to the new icon set, as they are just so much clearer than the old ones. And I know the old ones were originally created for and used on the old NWS design and got pixelated when they became enlarged for use on the newly designed webpages.
I guess I only have problems with a couple of the icons. For example, with the rain/snow, it's hard to tell that it's rain in the background since they overlay the icons and don't do the diagonal slash thing anymore. I guess any new icon set will take a learning curve, but I do think they will be better in the long-run.
BTW, out of curiosity, does anyone know where they get these pictures from? Some look computer-generated while others look like actual pictures taken by a professional that they must use.