I am a regular runner. The accurate micro-forecasts on Dark Sky were a huge help for me to plan ahead so I wouldn't get caught in the rain. Apple Weather mostly fails at this.
Additionally, I really dislike the Apple Weather dataviz for the day's trends. This time of year, the my local weather can wildly change from early morning to late afternoon, and I want to plan what to wear. I could glance quickly at Dark Sky and see the trend almost instantly. Apple Weather requires this awkward tap and drag gesture to see actual temperature values through the day.
Apple weather puts all sorts of weather data at the same level, despite the utility being wildly different. I need to know the temperature trend for the day, or rain chance. Wind speed isn't very useful to me day to day, yet they are at the same "level" of UI access. It doesn't feel very driven by user needs, but perhaps there are a lot more sailors using the app than I realize.
> Apple Weather requires this awkward tap and drag gesture to see actual temperature values through the day.
You mean scrolling horizontally to see the values?
It's not an awkward tap and drag, it's just scrolling.
But if you don't like scrolling (which I understand), then just tap without dragging, and it'll show you a full-screen graph with a curve representing the temperature throughout the whole day. It's fantastic.
The interface doesn't make it clear that it's tappable, I'll certainly admit. But I hope that helps you. The graph view only got added maybe a couple of years ago, and I think a lot of people maybe still don't know about it.
I think you ignore how much the telecom market reshaped itself in the meantime. Pre-breakup AT&T had complete market power over what technologies would or would not get deployed. The use of landlines has plummeted, to be replaced by cell phones. Today the average consumer has significantly greater choice when it comes to carriers, even if many of the usual suspects are still in the game. I question whether the breathing room would have existed in the market without the breakup. If you have an innovative startup idea in a space, and you have exactly one customer to sell to, you have a major uphill battle.
It seems clear to me that they are a company that no longer cares about strategic investment.
Their forays (acquisitions) into version control have been so amazingly weak. Stash was devoid of even basic features. Now they have Bitbucket:
- they still can't get it to perform adequately after years
- it lacks syntax highlighting in PR views
- it took them years to get side-by-side diffs into PR views
- it integrates with third party tools poorly
I thought maybe the Github acquisition would spur them into recognizing it as a important product category, but I guess not.
Additionally, I really dislike the Apple Weather dataviz for the day's trends. This time of year, the my local weather can wildly change from early morning to late afternoon, and I want to plan what to wear. I could glance quickly at Dark Sky and see the trend almost instantly. Apple Weather requires this awkward tap and drag gesture to see actual temperature values through the day.
Apple weather puts all sorts of weather data at the same level, despite the utility being wildly different. I need to know the temperature trend for the day, or rain chance. Wind speed isn't very useful to me day to day, yet they are at the same "level" of UI access. It doesn't feel very driven by user needs, but perhaps there are a lot more sailors using the app than I realize.