6/22/2023 0 Comments Weathersnitch 2Tap one to get a small, cute popup revealing some more information about a specific day in the future. The last one, month view, is a small calendar with illustrations on each day. In the week view, you get a list of the highest and lowest temperatures plus basic weather info with a descriptive word (like “cloudy”) and smaller versions of the aforementioned illustrations. For one day, you can take a look at the forecasts for each hours of the day. Each of these time spans features a different UI. Up comes a detailed forecast view for either the current day, next week, or month, selectable from a panel at the top. ![]() The second mode delivers all relevant information you can think of: current temperature (real and felt), air humidity, wind, longest viewing distance for fog, and rain probability as well.Įven more information is available behind the list view. Tap once on it to change the amount of displayed info: in the “simple” mode, you get only the current time, temperature (in Celsius or Fahrenheit) and the rain probability. The colors and illustration all look very good, and they change accordingly to weather conditions, and whether it’s day or night. When you’re in the city list view, in the lower third of the screen you already get all the current information about your default location in a colored panel with a hand drawn illustration (sun with clouds, moon, etc) in the middle. What makes WeatherSnitch a single-screen app is the fact that wherever you are within the app (except from the extended setting menu), you can also see a panel with the current forecasts. The app is localized for multiple countries including Italy, China, US, and Germany, so WeatherSnitch displayed my home town’s forecasts with fitting German meteorological terms. ![]() In the city list, using the button right to the city names, you can set your “favorite” city in order to display it at the top all the time, and investigate the location of the weather stations WeatherSnitch fetches its data from with an integrated Google Maps view. The original WeatherSnitch v1 and this new update are designed as “one view is all it takes” apps - just fire them up, get to the main screen displaying all relevant information, and continue with your workflow right away.Īfter the initial tutorial, you’ll be brought to the settings area where you’ll need to type in the cities you want weather forecasts for. After I reviewed StockTouch some weeks ago, I recently discovered WeatherSnitch 2, a weather app by developer Snitchware (with a website certainly inspired by ). I think I’ll have to abandon it completely, as there are way too many cool UIs in this app category. Today is the second time I don’t obey my “never cover stocks and weather apps” principle.
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