Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Apple
  5. Mobile
  6. Web
  7. News

The best hurricane trackers for two severe storms now approaching Gulf Coast

Add as a preferred source on Google

The Gulf Coast looks set to get battered by two hurricanes at the start of the week in a rare double-whammy weather incident.

Marco strengthened from a tropical storm to a Category 1 hurricane on Sunday and is forecast to reach the coast of Louisiana coast late Monday.

Recommended Videos

Following close behind is Laura, currently a tropical storm, though it could gain hurricane status by the time it reaches Louisiana late Wednesday, August 26.

Hurricane and storm surge warnings are currently in place for some communities along the coast of Louisiana and neighboring Mississippi.

For those in the storm zone, or anyone fascinated by extreme weather events for that matter, there are plenty of online resources providing up-to-date information on the progress of Marco and Laura.

One of the best free options is the National Hurricane Center (NHC) website. Although this government offering has a somewhat clunky design, it includes all the information you need for a broad and up-to-date picture on what’s happening, including wind speed probabilities, the expected arrival time of the winds, and, most importantly, the latest public advisory detailing watches and warnings that are in place.

For mobile, you might want to consider Hurricane Tracker ($3) for iOS and Android, which uses NHC data to relay storm news as it breaks. The app offers customization options for alerts regarding newly formed storms or for when a weather system makes landfall, among other features.

A free mobile offering comes via Hurricane, an app released by the American Red Cross (iOS and Android). Hurricane offers an interactive tracker that predicts where a storm is likely to head so you can make the best preparations. It also posts updates on local conditions as a storm system rolls in.

The Weather Channel’s website, Facebook page, and Twitter feed are also worth checking out, and the same goes for AccuWeather’s website, Facebook page, and Twitter feed.

Local TV and radio news channels will of course be all over any incoming storms, so stay tuned to get the latest updates. And don’t forget, if you have an Alexa-powered smart speaker, you can use it to set up severe weather alerts.

Stay safe, everyone.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Xperia 1 VIII is Sony’s latest camera nerd phone, but I’m wary of all the AI tuning
Sony’s new Xperia 1 VIII has AI camera help for people who hate auto mode
Sony Xperia 1 VIII being held up to take a picture

Sony’s Xperia phones have always been a little different. The company built phones for those who actually care about focal lengths, shutter buttons, color science, and camera-style controls on a phone. The new Xperia 1 VIII continues this tradition, but Sony is now adding a layer of AI assistance to the formula. Its latest flagship introduces an AI Camera Assistant powered by Xperia Intelligence, which is how Sony plans to stand out from the crowd—even though I'm still skeptical.

How Sony AI tries to guide rather than process

Read more
The Android Show 2026: Gemini Intelligence, Googlebook, Android 17 updates, and everything else
Gemini Intelligence, Googlebooks, Android 17, and redesigned Android Auto. Google didn't hold back at its pre-I/O show, and the main event is still a week away.
The Android Show 2026

Every year, Google front-loads its Android announcements in a separate pre-show the week before its annual I/O conference. This year, the company did exactly that, and The Android Show: I/O Edition was anything but a warmup act. 

Google showed up well prepared, with plenty of software and a major hardware announcement that took everyone by surprise. One by one, let's talk about everything, including a deeply integrated AI overhaul, a long-overdue security upgrade, an Android Auto makeover that feels like it was designed for 2026, and a brand-new laptop category. 

Read more
Apple iPhone’s Camera app could finally stop treating everyone like a beginner
iPhone users may soon get the customizable Camera app they’ve wanted
iPhone Camera app RAW toggle.

The iPhone Camera app has always been simple, sometimes to a fault. While this simplicity was great for the wider audience, the Camera app seemed to fall behind the Android competitors. But Apple may finally be ready to give users more control over what shows up on the screen.

According to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, Apple is planning a major Camera app interface update that will let users customize the row of controls at the top of the viewfinder. It also goes beyond just the simple UI elements being moved around, by adding new "widgets".

Read more