Felicia is fading, but Bill is building. Forming early Monday, Hurricane Bill sustained winds of 90 mph which are expected to climb to 110 mph — putting it in the running to become a major hurricane in the next couple of days.

The first official hurricane in the Atlantic this season, Bill is some 1000 miles east of the Lesser Antilles and is expected to track west-northwest as it builds. Residents of Bermuda should monitor its progress closely, and East Coast residents might be in for some choppy surf as a result as well.

Luckily there are umpteen ways to follow the progress of the storm as it develops. We've rounded up some of our favorite hurricane-chasing resources here, broken into sections for web-based resources, Twitter-specific sources and mobile hurricane tracking.

Web

1. MyFoxHurricane





MyFoxHurricane has been a staple of our hurricane tracking resources for its tracking maps, video footage, satellite photos, and live chat with other site visitors. You can also get updates coming right to you from their Facebook page and Facebook app, as well as follow them on Twitter. 2. Hurricane Central at Weather.com





It's another old standby but we'd be remiss for not including Weather.com. You can get the latest news on specific storms, track them live and even upload video footage if you're near an affected area and have something interesting to share. 3. StormAdvisory





StormAdvisory is a nice and simple Google Maps mashup where you can pick a current storm to overlay and see its trajectory. The link provided is to the Atlantic map tracker for Hurricane Bill, but the site provides eastern and western Pacific maps as well. 4. Ibiseye





Another Google Maps based web app, Ibiseye lets you plot multiple storms, see various views of the data and get a display of relevant statistics including distance from the nearest cities for each path point. 5. Intellicast





Intellicast offers current tracking and forecasts as well as visible and infrared satellite imagery, news, bulletins and alerts. They also have an iGoogle gadget available for start pages. 6. Weather Underground's Tropical Center





The tropical weather/hurricane section of Weather Underground offers tracking maps, satellite images, public advisories, computer models and interactive Flash maps. As we noted for Hurricane Fay trackers, one of the nicest infoviz options here is the Wundermap Google Maps mashup. 7. AccuWeather





AccuWeather is worth mentioning again as well for being one of the few that actually make their own forecasts, whereas many other resources pull in government forecast data. Videos and weather analysis are offered as well. 8. Stormpulse





Stormpulse is notable for its eye-catching interactive maps with full-screen functionality. They also have an API for embedding maps onto your own site.

Twitter









9. @MyFoxHurricane — Twitter feed from the web-based resource we mentioned above. 10. @hurricanes — regular updates about hurricanes in the tropics, with a focus on the Atlantic region. 11. @hurricanealerts — hurricane alerts and tropical storm updates and advisories for the coastal U.S. 12. @breakingweather — AccuWeather.com's Twitter feed offers updates on tropical storms and other severe weather conditions. 13. @wunderground — get hurricane and other severe weather warnings and updates from Weather Underground's Twitter feed. 14. @stormpulse — the Twitter feed of the Stormpulse site offers frequent updates on tropical weather worth tracking. 15. @hurricanetrack — for hardcore hurricane geeks, get stats and occasional live video streams from the folks behind hurricane news site HurricaneTrack.com.

Mobile







