The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
Comment. Sources I did find, which I don't consider significant coverage:
"Weather Star Jr. available in mid-1994". Communications Engineering Digest, Volume 20, Issue 1-7. International Thomson Communications. 1994. p. 59. The Weather Channel announced that delivery of its new, low-cost Weather Star Jr. model will begin in the middle of the year. The new model, manufactured by Wegener Communications and priced at $500, was developed for small systems that want to launch The Weather Channel but can't afford the more expensive Weather Star models. The unit is being field tested in eight cable systems around the U.S. before being released later this year, company officials said. [That's the entire article]
I forgot to mention the reference currently in the article, an archived page from The Weather Channel (seller of the Weather Star Jr) concerning an FCC requirement for audio beeps when a severe weather warning is initially announced. The archive.org link also contains a link to an archive of the Weather Star Jr.'s manufacturer's Installation and User's Guide. Neither of these are independent sources, so they don't count toward notability.
I found another article (possibly a press release), in the same Communications Engineering Digest as mentioned above; quoting entire article:
Communications Engineering Digest. International Thomson Communications, Volume 19, Issues 7-13. 1993. p. 73. Low-cost 'Weather Star' ATLANTA-The Weather Channel has announced a new, low cost version of its addressable 'Weather Star' receiving system. Officials with The Weather Channel say that the network has signed an agreement with Wegener Communications to manufacture the receiver, with shipments expected to begin next year. 'For some time, we have been looking for ways to make the Weather Star available to small systems,' says Becky Ruthven, VP of affiliate sales and marketing for The Weather Channel. 'After extensive R&D, we've developed a solution in terms of product features and cost. Many small systems that want to launch The Weather Channel have not been able to afford the Weather Star; that's about to change.' The Weather Star is part of the propriety patented satellite communications system developed by the Weather Channel for telecasting local, system-specific weather forecasts to cable viewers every five minutes. The new, low-cost model called the Weather Star Jr. will render forecasts in videotext (instead of the color graphics, animation, local weather radar and other visual effects available with the larger Weather Star 4000). As a result, the scaled-down model will be 'significantly less expensive' than the Weather Star 4000, company officials say. Circle Reader Service No. 43
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.