Sydney, Australia (SPX) Jan 06, 2026
Cameron Beccario, creator of the global weather visualization site earth.nullschool.net, has created a new company called Nullschool Technologies to support the platform's operation and development as a full-time focus. The one-person company is intended to keep the project small and flexible while adding structure to daily work, with the stated goal of making Earth's weather and climate visible to a wide audience.
As part of this step, Beccario has released the first official Nullschool mobile app for both iOS and Android. He notes that users had requested an app for years but that time constraints delayed the effort until recently, and the new release represents the result of a substantial development push.
The Nullschool app delivers the full functionality of earth.nullschool.net in a dedicated interface designed for phones and tablets. Unlike a mobile browser session, the app occupies the entire screen and supports both portrait and landscape orientations for viewing global maps and data layers.
The app also establishes a direct way for users to support the project financially. An optional subscription helps fund new feature development and infrastructure costs, while also giving subscribers access to additional features such as snapshot sharing and a Favorites gallery for saving and curating notable weather events.
On the technical side, the app is written in Typescript and React Native and uses a webview for the globe visualization at its core. This design lets the website and app share a common codebase, with only a subset of features, including the Favorites gallery, implemented specifically within the native app environment.
Beccario frames this first mobile release as a starting point rather than a finished product. He indicates that users can expect a series of improvements and feature additions over the course of 2026 as the shared codebase evolves.
In parallel with the app launch, earth.nullschool.net and the Nullschool app are now fully translated into 11 languages. Spanish, Hindi, and Traditional Chinese have been added to the existing set of localizations, and Beccario notes that, as the sole developer, he relied heavily on machine translation and encourages users to report any language issues they encounter.
Beccario also explains the origins of the Nullschool name, which dates back to an earlier search for a domain for personal email and a blog. He wanted a site that did not fit either "old school" or "new school" categories and initially considered "no school" as a label for content that resisted easy classification.
During a drive along Interstate 5 through Seattle with programmer friends, one suggested changing "no" to "null" to remove categorization altogether. With .com, .org, and .net as the main options at the time, the group settled on nullschool.net as the domain, which Beccario registered soon afterward.
For several years, the domain sat unused. That changed in 2013, when Beccario built a weather visualizer as a way to learn JavaScript and HTML/CSS and needed a place to host the project.
He deployed the globe-based visualization at earth.nullschool.net on the dormant domain without much deliberation. Since then, the site has grown into a widely used, interactive tool for exploring winds, ocean currents, and other environmental fields on a rotating Earth.
Beccario closes by thanking members of the earth.nullschool.net news community for their ongoing interest and feedback. He asks users to continue sharing ideas and feature requests, noting that even when individual replies are not possible, all input is read and considered when planning future development.
Download the new app here for Apple or Android
Related Links
Nullschool Technologies
Earth Observation News - Suppiliers, Technology and Application


Cameron Beccario, creator of the global weather visualization site earth.nullschool.net, has created a new company called Nullschool Technologies to support the platform's operation and development as a full-time focus. The one-person company is intended to keep the project small and flexible while adding structure to daily work, with the stated goal of making Earth's weather and climate visible