1. But did pressure better!Can you implement an auto record functionality which produces a graph of historical barometric values for the past 24-48 hours? This will improve the ability to visualize the atmospheric pressure changes and help with weather predictions while in the field.
2. Needs work?I love this app!! I suffer from severe migraines that are exacerbated by changes in the barometric pressure & I use it to track the changes to try to "predict" an intensity increase in my pain so I can take necessary preemptive actions.
3. I started at 65ft but by day three I had somehow managed to climb to 245ft still in the same spot and on the flattest state in the U.S.I am a retired court officer and I need constantly updated barometric pressure 24/7.
4. I will recommend to my fishing pals.Brilliant app, 'true to label', easy to use,navigate through and tells me the barometer reading locally without being weighed down with unnecessary info like 'when the next high tide in Hawaii is' or un-informative stuff that gets over the top sometimes.
5. I have a Samsung with a pressure sensor built in so I would cross-reference my phones actual pressure reading to what the app is displaying and although very close, the values were indeed different.
6. Thanks!The only thing I can think would make this app better would be a 1x1 widget to be able to glance at the current barometric pressure without having to open the app.
7. Yes, trout do feed in response to changes in air pressure.
8. The only suggestion I have is it would be nice if you could add a dark screen feature as the white bg is often painful to look at.Pros: it's the only barometer-altitude measuring app that I found that provides readings in both Sea Level and Station pressures.
9. Edit: Oops, the altimeter is crazy, though: I'm staying in same place, but it changes every few minutes.
10. noticed it was much slower to register changes in altitude/struggled operating quickly off of just GPS without cell signal.
11. Same happens with other map apps where you can sit still and appear to go up and down by as much as 300 ft depending on GPS signal strength, unless of course your phone has an altimeter.