WeatherPro updates every time you launch it and I've seen it change some of it's short term forecasting, so I have a lot more faith in what it is saying, especially it's short term forecasting of rainfall.ĭue to the nature of the updates in WeatherPro, I think that gives it a huge advantage over the Met Office app, and over the past few weeks it certainly seems to be more accurate. As we all know anything can happen to the weather over the course of a day. I have a feeling, much like the Met Office website, their app seems to get a update sometime overnight, but then never seems to update until the next day. It has an extra page full of graphs of Temperature, Precipitation Risk (very useful), Pressure, Sunshine Duration (solar work!), Humidity and Wind. ![]() Where WeatherPro comes into it's own in terms of features is it's extended data. ![]() There is an issue with the satellite animations when you compare them, the Met Office one (left) doesn't show a lot of the thin cloud visible on Weather Pro and on, I suspect it's just a "dumbed-down" animation of cloud cover for basic use. They both have basic forecasting, real time satellite data animations, and are configurable by location. These two apps share a lot of the same features. So how does this compare to the standard Met Office app? ![]() So looking at a lot of the reviews it looked like the best one would be WeatherPro. Now I have a new iPhone 4 (weehey), I thought I would invest in a "proper" weather app.
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