I've been a very happy user of the CARROT Weather app for as long as I can remember, so much so that I had been paying for the top-of-the-line $30/year "Premium Ultra" subscription, and then I changed that to the $50/year "Premium Family" level to share it with others in my household. I also like, and sometimes use, the built-in Apple Weather app. So when I heard about a recent update to yet another weather app, an app called Weather Up, I figured that I would look at it briefly out of curiosity but then go back to my favorites. To my surprise, I've been really impressed by Weather Up because it does one thing better than any other app. It has a fantastic widget on the iPad and iPhone, and a corresponding fantastic complication on the Apple Watch.
When I put a widget on my iPhone or iPad, my goal is to get the information that I want as fast as possible. CARROT Weather has always done a very nice job with its weather widgets. The widget that I have been using on my iPad shows both the next few hours and the next few days, using numbers to give me the temperature and placing those numbers at different heights so it is easy to see changes without even reading the exact numbers. And icons on the CARROT Weather widget provide further information about the type of weather:
It's a nice widget.
The Weather Up widget takes a different approach, both in the way that the graphics are displayed and also in the way that you can interact with the widget. First, the Weather Up widget uses a line that shows you the change from high to low, every day, over a couple of days. I find that I prefer using graphics that make it easier to see both the high and low every day. When rain is in the forecast, the widget indicates that by using blue lines to tell you the point in the day when rain will occur. For example, in the following picture, I can see some rain is coming in the middle of the day on Friday when it will get up to 78º:
Better yet, this is an interactive widget. If I tap on the part of the widget that shows me Friday, the widget changes to concentrate on Friday's weather. With this view, I can see more clearly that the rain starts a little before Noon and then continues for a few hours. Looks like a bad day to make plans to walk somewhere for lunch:
In addition to tapping on a specific day, you can tap on the arrow at the right to advance to the next few days. Doing so, I can see that the current forecast calls for even more rain all day on Sunday:
I love having an interactive weather widget on the iPad. It means that I never have to even launch the app itself to get the weather information that I need, which saves time. (With the CARROT Weather widget, tapping the widget launches the app.) And I also like the graphics used in the icons in the app for sunny, partly sunny, rainy, etc. I find that the graphics really pop.
I'm not currently using Weather Up on my iPhone, but I have tested it and it works well. The weather icons are a little larger than they are on an iPad. And if you own a Mac, you can also put the Weather Up widget on your Mac's desktop, which I have done.
The iPhone screen is more cramped, but Weather Up has a nice complication that shows almost as much information as the iPhone/iPad widget:
An Apple Watch complication cannot be interactive, so tapping the Weather Up widget merely launches the app, where you can see more specific information for each hour of the day and upcoming days. But just looking at the complication typically tells me everything that I need. Indeed, this is one of my all-time favorite Apple Watch complications in terms of how good it looks on the Apple Watch.
When you launch the Weather Up app on the iPhone or iPad, it shows you a weather map with radar showing you where it is raining (or showing).
Weather maps are very useful when it is raining, especially when the map is in motion, because you can get a good sense of what rain is coming your way. But the built-in Weather app made by Apple already does a fine job showing a weather map, and it is free. My CARROT Weather app also has a great weather map. The Weather Up weather map is certainly pretty, but I don't find it to be better in any meaningful way.
Weather Up costs $4/month or $40/year. As noted above, when I first installed the app, I had zero intention of keeping it on my devices for longer than 24 hours. But once I started using the widget on my iPad and the complication on my Apple Watch, I got sort of hooked. Both do an amazing job of communicating, in the most succinct way possible, the weather forecast, and they do so using fantastic graphics. And for now, at least, that is worth $4 a month to me. After a few months, if I find that I'm still enjoying the app as much as I do now, I'll probably switch to the annual plan.
Conclusion
It seems counterintuitive, but Weather Up is a fantastic app precisely because you never need to open up the app. I encourage you to check it out.
Click here to get Weather Up.