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Noticias

Heat wave expected to scorch Southern California this week – Los Angeles Times

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor junio 21, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

—– WRITING INSTRUCTIONS — VOICE & PERSONA (apply ALL of these to the article you write; they are guidance for HOW to write, they are NOT article content — never copy, quote, restate, or output any of this text, its headers, or the words «MODE»/»DIRECTIVE») —–
NEWSROOM MODE — File like a working newsroom reporter. Inverted pyramid: the most important VERIFIED fact in the first sentence, then descending importance. Attribute every claim to a source. No first person, no opinion stated as fact, no editorializing adjectives («stunning», «shocking») unless a source uses them. Deadline-clean: tight sentences, active voice, concrete nouns and verbs.
—– END WRITING INSTRUCTIONS —–

Forecasters are expecting 90-degree temperatures in downtown Los Angeles and the L.A. metro area — a marked increase from Saturday’s 75-degree …

—– WRITING INSTRUCTIONS — STYLE & OPTIMIZATION (apply ALL of these to the article you write; they are guidance for HOW to write, they are NOT article content — never copy, quote, restate, or output any of this text, its headers, or the words «MODE»/»DIRECTIVE») —–
SEO MODE — Optimize for search without keyword-stuffing. Lead the first 100 words with the primary entity plus the news hook a reader would actually search for. Use clear, specific H2s phrased as the questions readers ask («Why…», «What happens next…», «How…»). Front-load the answer in each section. Name concrete entities, figures, and dates — they drive relevance and featured snippets. Use the head term naturally a few times; never repeat it mechanically.
GEO MODE — Optimize to be quoted by AI answer engines (Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, ChatGPT). Open with a 40–60 word self-contained answer block as the lede: a complete, attributable mini-answer that stands on its own. Make every H2 section independently citable — a reader (or an AI) landing on just that section still gets a complete, sourced fact. State claims plainly with attribution («according to [source]»). Prefer concrete, liftable sentences over vague framing.
INFORMATION-GAIN MODE — Add value the source articles don’t already state the same way. Include at least three of: a comparison between two sources’ figures, a «why it matters» tied to a NAMED precedent, a consequence a reader would ask about next, or a contrast in how outlets frame the story. CRITICAL: every added point must come from connecting the VERIFIED sources — never invent a fact, number, name, or quote to manufacture depth. If the sources don’t support more, stay shorter rather than pad.
HUMAN MODE — Write so it doesn’t read like AI. Vary sentence length sharply (mix 5–8 word sentences with 20–25 word ones). Use contractions. Anchor every paragraph with one concrete detail, number, or name. Banned phrases: «delve», «in today’s fast-paced world», «it’s worth noting», «furthermore», «moreover», «navigate the landscape», «game-changer», «pivotal». Banned headings: «What It Means», «Key Takeaways», «In Conclusion». Read each sentence aloud — if it sounds like a press release, rewrite it. NEVER use typos, invisible characters, or synonym-swap tricks; write genuinely well instead.
E-E-A-T MODE — Demonstrate Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trust. Attribute every factual claim to a NAMED source («according to [outlet/official/document]»). Anchor the story in time with explicit dates. Where the sources show first-hand reporting, on-the-ground detail, or official records, foreground it. Distinguish what is confirmed vs. reported vs. alleged. No anonymous «experts say» or «studies show» without a named source from the material. Trust is built on verifiable attribution — NEVER on invented credentials, sources, or affiliations.
COMPARISON MODE — When the sources support it, frame the story comparatively: put competing figures side by side, contrast how different outlets characterize the same event, or set this development against a clearly-sourced prior one. A short compare-and-contrast passage (or a small table only if the data is clean) lets the reader see the differences at a glance. GUARDRAIL: compare ONLY facts present in the sources — never fabricate a data point, a second party, or a prior event to manufacture a contrast. If there is nothing real to compare, don’t force it.
—– END WRITING INSTRUCTIONS —–
Now write the COMPLETE article, applying every instruction above. Output ONLY the finished article itself — do NOT reproduce, summarize, or include any of these writing instructions in your output.

junio 21, 2026 0 comments
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Noticias

High of 83, chance of thunderstorms for Billings area – Billings Gazette

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor mayo 11, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

There’s a 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms in the forecast for Billings on Monday, according to the National Weather Service.

mayo 11, 2026 0 comments
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Noticias

Here’s where and when it’s expected to rain in Southern California this week

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor abril 27, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

More rain could be in store for Los Angeles this week. Skies will be partly cloudy Tuesday, with temperatures warming to the low to mid-70s, …

abril 27, 2026 0 comments
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Tecnología

Alerta por tormenta invernal tardía: vientos de 70 km/h y nevadas intensas en abril

by Editor de Tecnologia abril 27, 2026
written by Editor de Tecnologia

Alerta tecnológica: modelos meteorológicos predicen condiciones extremas para finales de abril

Los últimos modelos de pronóstico climático están arrojando datos preocupantes para las próximas semanas. Según las simulaciones más recientes, se espera una combinación volátil de precipitaciones intensas y ráfagas de viento de hasta 72 km/h (45 mph), lo que podría generar condiciones similares a una ventisca en pleno final de abril.

Este fenómeno, aunque no clasificado oficialmente como una tormenta invernal, presenta características que los sistemas de monitoreo tecnológico están analizando con especial atención. La convergencia de factores como la humedad elevada y los vientos sostenidos podría afectar infraestructuras críticas, desde redes eléctricas hasta sistemas de transporte automatizado.

Tecnología al servicio de la prevención

Ante este escenario, los centros de meteorología avanzada están empleando herramientas de inteligencia artificial para refinar las predicciones. Modelos basados en machine learning procesan datos en tiempo real provenientes de satélites, radares Doppler y estaciones terrestres para anticipar posibles impactos en:

Alertan por una enorme tormenta invernal que azotará más de 35 estados | Noticias Telemundo
  • Redes de distribución energética
  • Sistemas de navegación aérea y terrestre
  • Comunicaciones por satélite
  • Operaciones logísticas automatizadas

Expertos en resiliencia climática recomiendan a empresas y gobiernos revisar sus protocolos de contingencia, especialmente en zonas donde la combinación de viento y precipitación podría generar acumulaciones significativas en cortos períodos.

Mientras los modelos continúan ajustándose, las autoridades meteorológicas mantienen un monitoreo constante. La tecnología, en este caso, no solo sirve para predecir el clima, sino para mitigar sus efectos en una sociedad cada vez más dependiente de sistemas interconectados.

Se recomienda a los lectores consultar fuentes oficiales para actualizaciones en tiempo real, ya que las condiciones podrían evolucionar rápidamente en los próximos días.

abril 27, 2026 0 comments
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Noticias

NWS Confirms 2 Tornadoes in Saginaw County on Tuesday Night. – WNEM

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor abril 16, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

Bridgeport EF-0 Tornado. The second Tornado was rated EF-0. This tornado touched down at 12:06 a.m. EDT on April 15 near Roedel Road and South …

abril 16, 2026 0 comments
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Noticias

Denver breaks monthly heat record for 3rd time in a week

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor marzo 26, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

Denverites on Wednesday slogged through the hottest March day on record for the third time in a week as temperatures hit the high 80s across the state, with the heat reaching into the 90s in some Colorado communities.

Denver International Airport sensors logged a record-breaking 88 degrees at 2:50 p.m., busting the previous monthly record highs of 86 degrees (set Saturday) and 85 degrees (set March 19.)

Before this year, the hottest March day on record was 84 degrees on March 26, 1971, according to the National Weather Service.

Wednesday’s weather also shattered Denver’s daily record high for March 25, which was 75 degrees in 2012.

The recent stretch of sweltering spring days is thanks to a gigantic heat dome that is moving east slowly. Meteorologists and weather historians say it may end up being one of the most expansive heat waves in American history, according to The Associated Press.

Weather stations across Colorado logged temperatures well into the 90s on Wednesday, including 96 degrees in Greeley and Mack; 94 degrees in Fountain, Florence and Pueblo; 92 degrees in Denver and Southglenn; 91 degrees in Loveland; and 90 degrees in Lakewood, Aurora, Longmont and Fort Collins.

Colorado is one of 14 states that have seen their hottest March day on record this month, and a group of international climate scientists called World Weather Attribution said this week a heat wave of this magnitude “would have been virtually impossible without human-induced climate change.”

Denver is set to see a brief cooldown Friday, with highs in the 50s, before warm weather returns this weekend, forecasters said.

Get more Colorado news by signing up for our daily Your Morning Dozen email newsletter.

marzo 26, 2026 0 comments
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Negocio

Ola de Calor en California: Récords Batidos en Marzo

by Editora de Negocio marzo 20, 2026
written by Editora de Negocio

La alerta de calor extremo de esta semana en el sur de California ha batido récords, pero ¿por qué hace tanto calor en marzo? Existe una razón por la que se siente más como verano.

Según la meteoróloga de NBC Los Ángeles, Belen De Leon, un sistema de alta presión, combinado con otros factores, son los responsables.

Un sistema de alta presión ‘muy alto’

“Durante marzo, normalmente vemos sistemas de alta presión, pero son más débiles y no duran mucho”, explicó De Leon. “Pero ahora mismo, tenemos un sistema de alta presión masivo y récord en el suroeste, y no solo nos afecta aquí en el sur de California”.

De Leon dijo que el sistema de alta presión actual se extiende muy alto en la atmósfera, “más parecido a lo que se vería en pleno verano”.

“[El sistema de alta presión] es muy alto. Por lo tanto, cuanto más alto y fuerte sea ese sistema de alta presión, más aire empuja hacia abajo”, dijo. “Y cuando el aire desciende, se calienta y se comprime. Cuando ese aire se comprime, se calienta. Además, tenemos cielos despejados, sol continuo, eso es lo que provoca que las temperaturas suban tan rápidamente durante el día”.

De Leon dijo que el mayor problema con este sistema es que no se mueve.

“No se está moviendo; no hay nada que lo desplace”, explicó. “Por eso tenemos esta ola de calor prolongada. El calor está aumentando, los récords se están rompiendo e incluso nuestras noches son inusualmente cálidas”.

Récords de calor en el sur de California, superados

El meteorólogo de NBCLA, David Biggar, dijo que muchos récords de calor del sur de California se rompieron el miércoles, y es probable que se rompan más récords de calor, incluidos los récords históricos de marzo, el jueves y el viernes.

“Palm Springs podría acercarse al récord del ‘Día más caluroso de marzo’ en los Estados Unidos”, añadió.

Aquí hay algunas de las estadísticas récord del miércoles:

  • 82 grados en LAX: Rompió el récord de 79 grados de 1988
  • 87 grados en UCLA: Rompió el récord de 84 grados de 1978
  • 87 grados en Idyllwild: Rompió el récord de 75 grados de 2004
  • 91 grados en Long Beach: Rompió el récord de 86 grados de 1960
  • 92 grados en Palmdale: Rompió el récord de 84 grados de 1997
  • 93 grados en Lancaster: Rompió el récord de 85 grados de 2004
  • 95 grados en Anaheim: Rompió el récord de 88 grados de 2010
  • 95 grados en Santa Ana: Rompió el récord de 88 grados de 1978
  • 95 grados en el centro de Los Ángeles: Rompió el récord de 87 grados de 1997
  • 97 grados en Burbank: Rompió el récord de 89 grados de 1978
  • 98 grados en Riverside: Rompió el récord de 93 grados de 1914
  • 100 grados en Woodland Hills: Rompió el récord de 92 grados de 1997

Biggar dijo que la temperatura récord en Idyllwild también rompió el récord de la comunidad del día más caluroso de marzo de todos los tiempos.

Mientras los habitantes del sur de California luchan contra el calor excesivo, el aumento de las temperaturas está ejerciendo presión sobre las redes eléctricas. Macy Jenkins informa para NBC4 News a las 11 p.m. Del miércoles 18 de marzo de 2026.

Jueves y viernes: ‘La cima de la montaña rusa’

De Leon dijo que las temperaturas del jueves también alcanzarán máximos históricos. Aquí hay algunas temperaturas del pronóstico de Alerta Temprana de NBCLA:

  • 97 grados en Los Ángeles
  • 99 grados en Van Nuys
  • 100 grados en West Covina
  • 101 grados en San Bernardino
  • 102 grados en Riverside
  • 102 grados en Lake Elsinore

Las altas temperaturas persistirán hasta el viernes; la advertencia de calor extremo vence a las 8 p.m. Del viernes.

“Hoy y mañana, estamos en la cima de la montaña rusa”, dijo De Leon. “Y luego, algo de alivio este fin de semana”.

La ola de calor prolongada aumenta el riesgo de enfermedades relacionadas con el calor. Lauren Coronado informa para NBC4 News a las 6 a.m. Del 17 de marzo de 2026.

¿Qué sigue?

Según De Leon, el sistema de alta presión se desplazará ligeramente hacia el este este fin de semana. Eso traerá temperaturas ligeramente más frescas a la región, pero no mucho.

“Por lo tanto, eso mantendrá nuestras temperaturas muy por encima de lo que deberían ser para esta época del año”, dijo. “La próxima semana, seguirá haciendo calor y seguirá sintiéndose como verano”.

El sistema de alta presión persistirá durante la próxima semana.

De Leon dijo que las temperaturas de la próxima semana estarán en los 80 grados superiores y los 90 grados bajos, pero al menos no habrá temperaturas de tres dígitos.

marzo 20, 2026 0 comments
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Negocio

Denver: Ola de calor histórica con temperaturas récord en marzo

by Editora de Negocio marzo 19, 2026
written by Editora de Negocio

Denver se prepara para experimentar temperaturas inusualmente cálidas esta semana, con expectativas de alcanzar los 80 grados Fahrenheit por primera vez este año el miércoles. El Servicio Meteorológico Nacional anticipa que esta tendencia alcancará su punto máximo en los próximos tres días, con posibles récords de temperatura.

El registro más temprano de temperaturas de 80 grados en Denver fue el 10 de febrero de 2017, según datos del servicio meteorológico.

Se espera que la temperatura máxima del miércoles alrededor de las 4 p.m. Alcance los 80 grados, después de haber superado los 70 grados al mediodía, según los pronósticos horarios del servicio meteorológico.

Además, se ha emitido una alerta de bandera roja para el área de Denver y partes de las Llanuras Orientales desde las 11 a.m. Hasta las 7 p.m. Del miércoles. Los pronosticadores advierten que ráfagas de viento de hasta 30 millas por hora y niveles de humedad por debajo del 10%, incluso llegando al 8%, crearán condiciones climáticas críticas para incendios.

La ciudad continuará calentándose en los próximos días, con pronósticos que sugieren las siguientes temperaturas récord:

  • 82 grados el jueves, superando el récord de 81 grados del 19 de marzo de 1907.
  • 85 grados el viernes, superando el récord de 80 grados del 20 de marzo de 1907.
  • 87 grados el sábado, superando el récord de 78 grados del 21 de marzo de 1995.

La temperatura máxima prevista para el viernes, de 85 grados, también rompería el récord general de calor de marzo, que se sitúa en 84 grados desde 1971. El calor del sábado, de 87 grados, superaría ese récord por segunda vez.

Obtain more Colorado news by signing up for our daily Your Morning Dozen email newsletter.

marzo 19, 2026 0 comments
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Noticias

UPDATE: National Weather Service confirms tornadoes in Caroline and Kent Counties | Latest News

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor marzo 18, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

DELMARVA – The National Weather Service Philadelphia/Mount Holly has dispatched a team to areas of Delmarva to survey the wind damage from Monday night’s storms.

According to the NWS, the survey teams will focus on damage stretching from Goldsboro, MD into Kent County, Del. Slightly further south, the NWS will also survey a larger strip spanning as far west as the Eastern Bay in Talbot County, Md., including parts of Queen Anne’s and Caroline counties, to east of Frederica in Del.

On Tuesday, March 17, the NWS announced their team had confirmed an EF1 tornado had touched down in Ridgely, MD with maximum winds to 100mph.

On Tuesday evening, the NWS confirmed an EF1 tornado also hit Kent County, Del., near Frederica with maximum winds of 100mph.

The NWS says they are still reviewing wind damage near Camden, Del, and have not yet determined if it was straight line wind or tornado damage, as of 8 p.m. Tuesday evening.

The NWS says there was significant wind damage between Sudlersville and Millington in Queen Anne’s County due to straight line winds with speeds between 70-90mph. 

March 16’s storms impacted thousands, with widespread power outages reported overnight. DelDOT reported numerous road closures in both Kent and Sussex Counties due to storm damage.

Chopper 16 was overhead damaged homes across Kent County on Tuesday, revealing significant wind damage and scattered debris.

Winds gusted above 70 mph in some areas of Kent County late Monday, according to the NWS. Three tornado warnings were issued before the storms had passed.

The NWS says a final assessment with more details is expected to be completed Wednesday.

marzo 18, 2026 0 comments
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Noticias

Snow and wind in U.S., with threat of severe weather

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor marzo 16, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

CHICAGO — A broad and erratic patchwork of severe weather rumbled across much of the U.S. on Sunday, dumping heavy snow and making roads impassable in the Upper Midwest while damaging high winds swept across the Plains. Hawaii also continues to be affected by severe flooding.

Portions of the mid-South readied for late-day thunderstorms. Forecasters said the storms will spread eastward and by Monday threaten a large swath of the Eastern United States, with the mid-Atlantic states and Washington, D.C., at greatest risk for high winds and tornadoes.

Successive punches of snow, wind and severe weather are “going to impact the eastern half of the United States,” AccuWeather senior meteorologist Tyler Roys said. Beyond the threat to lives and property, he said, “whether it’s wind gusts from a squall line, blizzard or snow, or just wind because of the storm, you’re looking at several major airports being impacted.”

Heavy snow in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan

More than 20 inches of snow had fallen in some portions of southeastern Minnesota and western Wisconsin as of Sunday afternoon, according to National Weather Service reports, with more snow expected in Minneapolis and elsewhere amid blizzard warnings.

Warnings of hazardous road conditions were issued across Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin, where transportation officials warned of worsening conditions Sunday with low visibility and snow-covered roadways.

More than 600 flights into and out of Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport were canceled Sunday, according to FlightAware, a website that tracks flight disruptions. Dozens more through Detroit were also scrapped.

An area from central Wisconsin to Michigan’s Upper Peninsula was likely to see more than 2 feet of snow, with higher isolated totals on the peninsula, Roys said. Lower snow accumulations in places such as Chicago and Milwaukee will still probably create trouble for commuters on Monday, he added.

Wisconsin snowplow driver Aaron Haas said it was one of the worst storms he had seen in years. On Sunday around the town of Marshfield, Haas was stacking piles of snow as high as his truck.

“You can’t see anything when you’re on the highways outside of the city,” he said.

Jim Allen, 45, who lives on the Upper Peninsula, said his family stocked up on necessities and he was ready to clear snow several times Sunday with the shovel and snowblower.

“We’re basically prepared to just kind of hunker down for a few days if we need to,” Allen said.

Landslides, rescues, collapsed home on Maui

Rain continued falling on Sunday in Hawaii, where acres of farmland and homes have been flooded, roads have been closed and shelters opened. PowerOutage.us, which tracks outages nationwide, reported more than 50,000 customers in Hawaii were without power as of early Sunday.

Flash flooding has been a major problem in recent days in places such as Maui, Molokai and the Big Island, where 1 to 2 inches of rain an hour had been falling overnight, according to the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency.

Maui County Mayor Richard Bissen said in a social media post late Saturday that some areas of Maui had received more than 20 inches of rain in the previous 24 hours.

“We’re seeing flooding, landslides, sinkholes, debris and downed power lines across the county,” he said. Expressing gratitude in the Hawaiian language, the mayor added, “Mahalo for continuing to look out for one another.”

Images incorporated into the mayor’s video showed washed-out or collapsed roads, a car stuck in floodwaters and raging waterways. National Guard and fire department workers have made multiple floodwater rescues, Bissen said.

Tom and Carrie Bashaw said they could do little to prevent part of their home in Maui’s Iao Valley from collapsing beneath rising waters. On Friday, the water’s force starting overtaking nearby trees.

“When we lost the mango and monkey pod, we started throwing stuff in bags and packing up,” Tom Bashaw told HawaiiNewsNow. They returned Saturday morning and “the whole backside of the house” was gone, he said.

Maui resident and real estate broker Jesse Wald, who recorded video of a coastal road’s collapse Saturday, said other parts of road were flooded out by mud and sediment.

“In the 20 years I’ve been here I’ve never seen this much rain,” Wald said. “I’m from Wisconsin and we get thunderstorms, you know, pretty often in the summer, so it felt like a Wisconsin thunderstorm but times 10.”

Power outages persist

More than 210,000 utility customers in six Great Lakes states were without electricity as of Sunday afternoon, according to PowerOutage.us. Some originated on Friday when gusts in the region reached 85 mph.

In Nebraska, about 30 National Guard members were deployed to help combat multiple wildfires across a broad swath of range and grassland, the state’s Emergency Management Agency said.

As of Saturday, three of the largest wildfires had damaged well over 900 square miles, the agency said. One fire-related fatality was reported Friday, and in a news release Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen urged residents to follow locally issued evacuation orders, adding that winds were “supposed to be extraordinary” on Sunday.

The weather service issued a high-wind warning Sunday for most of Nebraska, with gusts of up to 60 mph possible amid falling snow. Roys said high winds would affect a region stretching from the U.S.-Mexico border to the Great Lakes, and from Denver eastward to the Appalachian Mountains.

Line of storms, tornadoes expected

The National Weather Service warned that a line of severe storms with damaging winds would cross much of the Eastern U.S. by late Monday. It was to begin Sunday afternoon and cross the Mississippi, Tennessee and Ohio valleys.

The storm threat was expected to enter the Appalachians early Monday, then move toward the East Coast, where “severe thunderstorms with widespread damaging winds and several tornadoes” were expected during the day Monday, the weather service said.

A stretch from parts of South Carolina to Maryland appeared most likely to experience the greatest damaging winds Monday afternoon, the weather service said. That could include Raleigh, N.C.; Richmond, Va.; and the nation’s capital. The weather service said an increased — albeit much lower — risk stretched north to New York and south to Florida, with thunderstorms possible in New England.

Tareen and Robertson write for the Associated Press and reported from Chicago and Raleigh, respectively. AP writers Julie Walker in New York and Matthew Brown in Billings, Mont., contributed to this report.

marzo 16, 2026 0 comments
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