hope that puts an end to the usage of ACNFS maps
I like Hycom myself. Nobody in their right mind ever single-sources information to begin with. We have a plethora of independent resources at our fingertips to synthesize and check for consistency.
It is a very decent project in some ways. For example, where else do you see a responsive export forum like Hycom (just look at the technical sophistication of some of their answers)? Answer: other sites never get back to you, never fix valid bugs you report, never implement easy suggested improvements, never fix broken files, or have a PR rep pat you on the head and pretend to forward your question on to a specialist whose contact information you are never given.
Where else do you see ongoing product development? The Hycom products are imperfect but they are very active in trying to improve them. I mostly see projects on autopilot, ghost ships that sail the same old seas long after the PI has passed on. Meagre documentation and no one left who could write it.
Mostly though I like the visionary aspects of the animations. They've built a very nice container so it's already in place to hold improved product. Even if the Hycom data is ultimately wrong, their representation of it is still very effective, whereas science communicated poorly is just those trees falling silently in the forest.
Where else is anyone even making a stab at predicting 2D sea ice conditions? Nowhere, they are all looking at today or analyzing the rear view mirror. It's from venturing predictions that you find out where and why your theories go wrong.
Why do we have fix so many maps and make so many animations? Because so many projects are too damn lazy or incompetent to offer and archive them. People just going thru the motions at work: they won't spend ten minutes making a fix if the time can't be billed to a grant.
I was looking around today for some basic July-Sept 2012. Modis has it but never got around to reprocessing it to the consensus projection, meaning there's no land mask or co-registration. AMSR2 3k started up in 2013. But there's Hycom with everything imaginable archived and indexed. And some of it, like the ice edge position and off-ice surface salinity and temperature, is decent enough.