One of the great features of the Apple Watch is complications, which allow you to have exactly the information you need to see on your watch face. A large number of users like to place weather-related complications on the display of their Apple Watch. In today's article, we will give you a closer look at the watchOS application Weathergraph, which allows you to monitor the current state and weather forecast on the display of your Apple Watch in various ways.
The Weathergraph application comes from the workshop of the Czech developer Tomáš Kafka. It's only for the Apple Watch and offers a number of different complications for compatible watch face types. It's up to you what kind of information you want displayed on the display of your Apple Watch - Weathergraph offers, for example, an hour-by-hour weather forecast, data on weather conditions, temperature or cloud cover, clear graphs of the development of the outside temperature, or even data on snowfall. In addition to complications with graphs, you can also use complications showing wind direction and speed, cloudiness, temperature, probability of precipitation, air humidity or cloudiness.
Tapping on the relevant complication on the watch face will launch the app as such on your Apple Watch, where you can conveniently read more weather-related details. There is absolutely nothing to criticize about the application - it is reliable, accurate, graphs and simple complications are completely clear and understandable, the data is updated reliably and regularly. The Weathergraph application is completely free in its basic form, for the PRO version with a richer theme library and greater options for customizing the displayed data, you pay 59 crowns per month, 339 crowns per year, or 779 crowns for a one-time lifetime license.
The idea is good, but the payment is laughable, specifically the monthly rent or the total lump sum. Here again, snobbery and the desire to get greedy are shown. If it was a one-off 129 CZK, then ok, but 779? The application is not in Czech, it pulls the data from YR. Why? do we not have enough own resources? And he doesn't even have the balls to give a one-week trial version in the full version so that you can test whether it's worth the money. What is in the free version is useless or it won't convince me to buy it for a month, or a year, or at all. Sorry
Complete agreement.
Hello, this is the author of the application, thanks for the feedback.
The Pro version is made as a subscription mainly because it includes the commercial weather forecast from Dark Sky, where you pay for each forecast download - and they run hourly for complications.
I will soon be adding Foreca, another commercial forecast source with excellent accuracy.
Czech forecasts are honestly not worth solving, we are too small a country for that, I am planning translations, but I have a lot of things I want to get to earlier.
Thanks for the trial version idea, I'll admit I haven't thought of it yet, I'll see how much work it would be.
Nice day!