Most weather apps give you data. Weder gives you answers.
There's a reason you check the weather every morning and still walk outside unsure what to wear. It's not because the data is wrong — it's because raw data doesn't map to human experience. 26° means nothing. "3° warmer than yesterday" means everything. You remember yesterday. You were there.
Weder is built around one idea: compare today to yesterday at the same time. Not numbers in a vacuum, but differences you can actually feel. Slightly warmer. Noticeably cooler. Same as yesterday. Your body already knows the reference point — Weder just uses it.
Rain works the same way. "25% chance of rain" is a statistic. It doesn't tell you whether to grab an umbrella, leave now, or wait it out. Weder tells you when rain starts and when it stops. That's the only thing that matters.
One screen. No charts. No hourly bars. No percentages. Just the three things you actually need to know before you walk out the door.
What Weder tells you:
— How today feels different from yesterday
— Whether it will rain, and exactly when
— How tomorrow compares to today
What Weder doesn't show you:
— Probability percentages
— UV index, humidity, dew point
— Hourly forecast tables
— Anything that requires interpretation
Settings work the same way. Instead of toggles and dropdowns, you finish a sentence: "I'd like to be notified if the weather changes by 3°C at 7am every day." Because even preferences should feel human.
Weder is for people who just want to know what to wear.
Easy weather.