How to connect Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather
Create a New Scenario to Connect Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather
In the workspace, click the “Create New Scenario” button.

Add the First Step
Add the first node – a trigger that will initiate the scenario when it receives the required event. Triggers can be scheduled, called by a Google Cloud Speech-To-Text, triggered by another scenario, or executed manually (for testing purposes). In most cases, Google Cloud Speech-To-Text or Open Weather will be your first step. To do this, click "Choose an app," find Google Cloud Speech-To-Text or Open Weather, and select the appropriate trigger to start the scenario.

Add the Google Cloud Speech-To-Text Node
Select the Google Cloud Speech-To-Text node from the app selection panel on the right.

Google Cloud Speech-To-Text
Configure the Google Cloud Speech-To-Text
Click on the Google Cloud Speech-To-Text node to configure it. You can modify the Google Cloud Speech-To-Text URL and choose between DEV and PROD versions. You can also copy it for use in further automations.
Add the Open Weather Node
Next, click the plus (+) icon on the Google Cloud Speech-To-Text node, select Open Weather from the list of available apps, and choose the action you need from the list of nodes within Open Weather.

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Open Weather
Authenticate Open Weather
Now, click the Open Weather node and select the connection option. This can be an OAuth2 connection or an API key, which you can obtain in your Open Weather settings. Authentication allows you to use Open Weather through Latenode.
Configure the Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather Nodes
Next, configure the nodes by filling in the required parameters according to your logic. Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are mandatory.
Set Up the Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather Integration
Use various Latenode nodes to transform data and enhance your integration:
- Branching: Create multiple branches within the scenario to handle complex logic.
- Merging: Combine different node branches into one, passing data through it.
- Plug n Play Nodes: Use nodes that don’t require account credentials.
- Ask AI: Use the GPT-powered option to add AI capabilities to any node.
- Wait: Set waiting times, either for intervals or until specific dates.
- Sub-scenarios (Nodules): Create sub-scenarios that are encapsulated in a single node.
- Iteration: Process arrays of data when needed.
- Code: Write custom code or ask our AI assistant to do it for you.

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AI Anthropic Claude 3
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Open Weather
Trigger on Webhook
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Save and Activate the Scenario
After configuring Google Cloud Speech-To-Text, Open Weather, and any additional nodes, don’t forget to save the scenario and click "Deploy." Activating the scenario ensures it will run automatically whenever the trigger node receives input or a condition is met. By default, all newly created scenarios are deactivated.
Test the Scenario
Run the scenario by clicking “Run once” and triggering an event to check if the Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather integration works as expected. Depending on your setup, data should flow between Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather (or vice versa). Easily troubleshoot the scenario by reviewing the execution history to identify and fix any issues.
Most powerful ways to connect Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather
Google Cloud Speech-To-Text + Open Weather + Slack: When a new audio file is added to cloud storage, Google Cloud Speech-To-Text transcribes it. The transcribed text is used to determine the location mentioned in the audio. Open Weather then retrieves the current weather conditions for that location, and a message containing the transcribed text and weather information is sent to a specified Slack channel.
Google Cloud Speech-To-Text + Open Weather + Google Calendar: An audio file containing spoken weather conditions is processed by Google Cloud Speech-To-Text. The transcribed text is then used to log the weather conditions, and a new event is created in Google Calendar to track the weather data, referencing the weather conditions from the transcription.
Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather integration alternatives
About Google Cloud Speech-To-Text
Automate audio transcription using Google Cloud Speech-To-Text within Latenode. Convert audio files to text and use the results to populate databases, trigger alerts, or analyze customer feedback. Latenode provides visual tools to manage the flow, plus code options for custom parsing or filtering. Scale voice workflows without complex coding.
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About Open Weather
Use Open Weather in Latenode to automate weather-based triggers for business logic. Get current conditions or forecasts to adjust marketing campaigns, logistics, or facility management. Unlike standalone apps, Latenode lets you blend weather data with other services, apply custom logic, and scale your automation affordably based on execution time.
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See how Latenode works
FAQ Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather
How can I connect my Google Cloud Speech-To-Text account to Open Weather using Latenode?
To connect your Google Cloud Speech-To-Text account to Open Weather on Latenode, follow these steps:
- Sign in to your Latenode account.
- Navigate to the integrations section.
- Select Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and click on "Connect".
- Authenticate your Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather accounts by providing the necessary permissions.
- Once connected, you can create workflows using both apps.
Can I automate weather-based voice alerts?
Yes, you can! Latenode allows you to trigger voice alerts based on Open Weather data, using Google Cloud Speech-To-Text to convert text to speech, enhancing safety and convenience.
What types of tasks can I perform by integrating Google Cloud Speech-To-Text with Open Weather?
Integrating Google Cloud Speech-To-Text with Open Weather allows you to perform various tasks, including:
- Creating spoken weather reports triggered by voice commands.
- Generating automated audio alerts for severe weather conditions.
- Transcribing weather data to analyze trends with voice notes.
- Building voice-activated systems to control weather-sensitive devices.
- Setting up location-based speech notifications for weather updates.
Can I use advanced logic with Speech-To-Text?
Yes! Latenode lets you add custom code and AI to Speech-To-Text, enabling complex automations beyond simple triggers and actions.
Are there any limitations to the Google Cloud Speech-To-Text and Open Weather integration on Latenode?
While the integration is powerful, there are certain limitations to be aware of:
- Real-time transcription accuracy depends on the quality of the audio input.
- Weather data accuracy is subject to Open Weather's data sources.
- The number of supported languages depends on Google Cloud Speech-To-Text.