![]() This continued into iOS 14.3 when Apple dramatically expanded its air quality information. It did start the process last year in iOS 14, gaining key Dark Sky features like a next-hour precipitation chart and multi-day precipitation forecasts, along with severe weather alerts and other significant upcoming changes in weather patterns. Such improvements seemed inevitable with last year’s acquisition of popular weather app Dark Sky, but it’s obviously taken Apple some time to fully integrate them into its own Weather experience. ![]() While there’s sadly still no iPad version of Weather - only the same Weather widget that debuted last year in iPadOS 14 - the additions to the iPhone’s Weather app somewhat make up for this, both in style and substance. ![]() That’s changed with iOS 15, however, which offers some of the biggest upgrades to the Weather app in the entire history of the iPhone. Apple’s Weather app is probably one of the most used but least thought about apps on your iPhone - a simple but reliable source of information that most of us glance at every day but don’t otherwise pay too much attention to.
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