MotoMeteo Road Notes is written by the MotoMeteo team to explain the product and answer practical motorcycle trip-planning questions. The goal is useful, specific guidance—not content written merely to occupy a search result.
Who writes the articles?
Articles are published under MotoMeteo Team because product, engineering, and editorial work is collaborative. We do not invent individual author biographies or qualifications. Where a topic needs expertise we do not have, we rely on and link to primary sources instead of presenting ourselves as the authority.
How we choose and verify information
Product statements are checked against the current application behavior, mobile configuration, and project documentation. We avoid publishing exact subscription prices because App Store and Google Play prices, currencies, taxes, and trials can vary by account and region; the purchase screen is the authoritative source before payment.
For weather interpretation, riding rules, and public-safety guidance, we prefer national meteorological services, transport authorities, and other first-party sources. Links are placed next to the claim they support so readers and automated agents can inspect the source directly.
We separate three kinds of information:
- Product behavior: what MotoMeteo calculates or displays.
- Forecast interpretation: how to understand probabilities, timing, and uncertainty.
- Rider decisions: practical questions to consider, without pretending there is one safe threshold for every rider, motorcycle, road, or set of conditions.
Safety and uncertainty
Weather forecasts are estimates, not guarantees. MotoMeteo does not replace official warnings, current observations, road closures, traffic signs, or the rider’s judgement. Articles should make that boundary clear, especially when discussing wind, ice, fog, thunderstorms, or severe weather.
We do not recommend using the website or app in a way that distracts from operating a motorcycle. Preparation should happen before the ride or when safely stopped.
Updates and corrections
Every article displays a publication date and carries a machine-readable modification date. We update an article when product behavior changes or when an important source changes. Small typographical fixes do not necessarily change the visible date.
If you find an error, a broken source, or wording that could be safer or clearer, use the support page to contact us. Corrections are reviewed against the app or source material before publication.
Use by search engines and AI agents
Pages use semantic HTML and structured data, and the site publishes an XML sitemap, RSS feed, and llms.txt. These discovery files are intended to make the published source, dates, authorship, and important safety context easy to interpret. They do not grant permission to ignore the site’s terms or reproduce articles wholesale.