Both the CFO and DFO websites feature Bird Trax, which provides a sweet summary of
rarities culled from eBird reports. Since Friday Bird Trax has been on the fritz, and
no one seems to know when or if it will reappear. My, oh my.
I asked Ann Johnson, web guru for CFO and DFO, "Whazzup?" and she replied:
As most of you know, the developer of BirdTrax quit supporting it over a year ago, but except for an occasional hiccup it has been performing well.
Apparently something has changed on the eBird end to break things. Because it has been in use by so many all over the world, I have to believe there will be a solution at some point, but I'm just not sure when that might be. Since it is proprietary code, there's not much I can do about it other than try to track down answers. Stay tuned on what this all means.
In the meanwhile the Colorado Rare Bird Alert, eBird and other sources remain available
for the latest tidings.
Joe Roller, Denver
volunteer RBA compiler team
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