{
  "activity_count": 5,
  "callsign": "X4ID",
  "confidence": 0.85,
  "first_seen": "2025-10-25T18:36:03+00:00",
  "found": true,
  "id": 16368,
  "is_net_control": false,
  "last_seen": "2026-06-11T22:23:59.349487+00:00",
  "occurrence_count": 5,
  "profile": {
    "confidence": 0.7075,
    "counts": {
      "ncs": 0,
      "net": 1,
      "open_qso": 6
    },
    "data_freshness": "2025-11-01T18:28:02",
    "latest_topic": "Hurricane Melissa",
    "most_topic": "Tropical storms and hurricanes",
    "open_vs_net_bias_score": -0.849,
    "personal_summary": "X4ID is knowledgeable and engaging, sharing detailed meteorological information and staying on topic.",
    "scores": {
      "civility": 1.0,
      "focus": 0.85,
      "friendly": 0.9,
      "helpful": 0.9,
      "serious": 0.95,
      "technical": 0.85
    },
    "source": "legacy_callsign_profiles",
    "summary": "X4ID discusses recent and upcoming tropical storms and hurricanes, providing detailed information on their strength and potential impact.",
    "topic_coverage": {
      "Asteroids and meteors": 0.2,
      "Hurricane Melissa": 0.5,
      "Meteorology": 0.3
    },
    "updated_at": "2025-12-23T03:40:02"
  },
  "qrz_status": null,
  "recent_transcripts": [
    {
      "callsign_confidence": 0.85,
      "confidence": null,
      "created_at": "2025-11-01T18:27:03+00:00",
      "id": 73958,
      "node_number": "oldsys",
      "recording_id": 73957,
      "text": " Alright, so, big story as I mentioned is Hurricane Melissa. Hurricane Melissa set a number of records and it was an absolutely devastating storm for what it was. So, Melissa is currently still out there, it's become an extra tropical cyclone and it's racing off into the North Atlantic. At this point in time it doesn't really pose a significant threat to anyone. It's going to end up just south of Reykjavik, so it's heading up way into the North Atlantic. But it did bring some unsettled weather to Atlantic Canada and obviously any boats floating around in the North Atlantic. But it basically impacted Jamaica, Cuba and parts of the Bahamas before blasting north and giving some unsettled weather to Bermuda. Let me cycle it."
    },
    {
      "callsign_confidence": 0.85,
      "confidence": null,
      "created_at": "2025-11-01T18:24:38+00:00",
      "id": 73954,
      "node_number": "oldsys",
      "recording_id": 73953,
      "text": " And even if they happen to make it through the atmosphere, the vast majority of meteors and even smaller asteroids tend to hit the bodies of water, the ocean, the Atlantic Pacific Ocean, in comparison to how many actually hit land."
    },
    {
      "callsign_confidence": 0.85,
      "confidence": null,
      "created_at": "2025-09-27T18:33:12+00:00",
      "id": 48137,
      "node_number": "oldsys",
      "recording_id": 48136,
      "text": " VA3 VW X4ID and this is likely at this point in time this is likely to be the strongest tropical system we've seen this year, this calendar year as of January. So according to the JMA, that's the Japanese Meteorological Association, it had a 10 minute sustained wind of 205 km an hour, that's 125 mph and they were giving it a central minimum pressure of 905 HPA, that's 26.72 inches of mercury or 905 millibars. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center is slightly different, their 1 minute sustained winds were 270 km an hour, that's 165 mph. The discrepancy of course is one is a 10 minute sustained wind speed, the other is a 1 minute sustained. So essentially you're looking at a gust, most of the gusts are sort of micro gusts, they're on the order of 10 seconds or so, but the 1 minute sustained winds are sort of what we're used to looking at with the Saffir-Simpson scale, even in Australia they use that for their cyclones. Either way 270 km an hour is the 1 minute sustained winds, that's 165 mph and the pressure from the JTWC, that's the Joint Typhoon Warning Center, that's a little higher at 910 millibars or HPA and that's 26.87 inches of mercury. Let me drop it."
    },
    {
      "callsign_confidence": 0.85,
      "confidence": null,
      "created_at": "2025-09-20T18:44:40+00:00",
      "id": 43040,
      "node_number": "oldsys",
      "recording_id": 43039,
      "text": " Victor Alpha 3, Victor Iski X-Ray 4AD and the last one was Typhoon Nogori this one right now it's a very strong typhoon, winds of 220 kilometers an hour but it's not threatening anyone or anything it's meandering north the Pacific it's way over there's nothing there the closest land mass would be Japan PropRite say and it's not going to impact at least not directly they might get some waves and stuff from it but it's basically going north and it's just going to fade out but it is intensifying at this point in time so it's probably going to peak early Sunday afternoon as a super typhoon with winds of about 250 kilometers an hour before it starts weakening that's what's going on with those two storms out there again very very powerful storms and the only other one out there there is a disturbance near Cabo Verde keeping an eye on that not really a good chance of development in the next couple days and they're just watching the usual development area to the south but again Gabrielli is the only storm that's closest to North America it's going to recoil back and head over to Europe and they've also been having some historic heat in parts of Europe I'll mention that really quickly, let me cycle it"
    },
    {
      "callsign_confidence": 0.85,
      "confidence": null,
      "created_at": "2025-09-06T19:02:13+00:00",
      "id": 33691,
      "node_number": "oldsys",
      "recording_id": 33690,
      "text": " I think that was me, Ken. VA6 TBO, Victor Alpha 16, Eagle Bravo, Oscar, in Medicine Head, Alberta."
    }
  ]
}