Thanks for the recommendation. Not sure about iOS, but it looks like the android app hasn't been updated since 2015. Also unfortunately the web version doesn't seem to be quite as polished, but hope they can improve it soon. Fyi, meteoblue meteograms, while not exactly the same, gives a similar way to visualize cloud levels and density, and is free as well.
Thank you for this! I just used this app to plan a trip to the Oregon Coast (Bandon), and it was so helpful AND accurate. I wanted to offer you a video(s) idea. You touched upon it briefly in this video: weather conditions. I’m still pretty new to photography in general, and I loved the tidbit about how clouds higher in the skies are preferable than low ones at sunset. I’d love to see a video that goes into various weather conditions, their pros/cons, and some guidelines as to how to photograph in them. Just general concepts. Anyhow, thanks for all you do! I look forward to your videos every week.
Been using this app for years. Night photography to start. When I saw the fog section I fell in love. I even created a pdf on how to read it for my camera club’s website. Great video Mark!
I'm so glad you did an episode on the phone app. I have used it in the past and played around with it to see what the features can do. I'm also glad you mentioned the fog portion of the app and explained the settings regarding how to somewhat 'predict' when fog may occur. Again, another great informative episode on a very useful topic. Thank you very much for the video.
Thank you, Mark. I’ve been using Clear Outside since one of your earlier recommendations and I agree it’s one of the most accurate fog predictors when the temperature and dewpoint match or get within a point or two of each other AND there is no rain at the same time. I also think Windy is a very accurate fog predictor. It has a fog screen and you can hit play or slowly scroll the timeline on the bottom for seven days and watch the fog develop and then fade. If both Clear Outside and Windy tell me there’s fog - I am there. Together I find them almost 100% accurate. I also use Windy for its cloud screens. You can choose high, low, medium, and overall clouds. When Clear Outside tells me it’s all or mostly all high clouds I use Windy to see where the clouds actually are going to be in relation to where I am. Sometimes Clear Outside tells me there are clouds but Windy may show the cloud line breaks in the direction I plan on photographing (mountains , ocean, etc.) maybe a little too complicated but it has allowed me to shift my planned location slightly and has helped. I don’t cancel a trip because no matter what you just need to be out there. Again thanks for everything Mark, great information all the time.
Thank you for the reminder about this app, Mark! I downloaded it years ago and never really used it. I had forgotten I had it! Your explanation was perfect…I’ve moved it front and center. Ready to try it with a fresh approach! Thanks again.
I've used the app for sunset/sunrise clouds and agree with your enthusiasm. Your insight into the Dew Point/fog correlation was new to me. Thanks for giving me a new tool!
Good video Mark. Talking about predicting fog, looking at the relative humidity is also a great indicator, especially when it's in excess of 90%. Have a great Christmas
Very useful Mark! Side note: on 12/10 I was driving south from Denver on 1-25 in Colorado. We had a dry snow of 4-5 inches the night before. As I got closer to Pikes Peak I could see that winds were blowing the snow off the ridges. Creating this amazing sparkle. It was bright out with a just wisp of clouds on the summit. Beautiful view but no camera to do it justice. Anyway I see this app will forecast by lat/lon so could be useful for winter mountain compositions or sand dunes!
I rarely "subscribe" to You Tube channels. Especially "photography" related channels even though I do a lot of photography...I'm retired so plenty of time for that. A BIG THANKS for this video. I had that app already but didn't know how to use it until I saw this video and you explained it from A to Z. Weather is so important and yet not much attention is paid to understanding the "weather". So I have "Subscribed" and of course "liked". You do a great job on all your videos and I am now go to use you as my "Number 1 go to" source for photography related information. And, I am now following you on Instagram as well. Thanks Mark.
One note on a mist: a wind, elevation and thermal mass greatly affects probability of it if a dew point is a bit higher than an ambient temperature. That's why it is much harder to see mist in the city where buildings and roads absorbed a lot of heat, but if you go into park or lake there would be much higher chance finding mist in those edge conditions. Forests are even better as they are more moist and less heated so one could be more courageous when planning a shoot. BTW I like your phone case, if it works why bother, we're not instagram models 🙂
Clear Outside has been languishing on my iPhone for quite some time, upstaged by the likes of Astrospheric and Windy. Thanks for the reminder of its cloud forecasts by level and temperature/humidity forecasts, presented in a straightforward display.
I mainly use Yr for weather, and I've found it to be the most useful app for checking the weather. Now, Yr is a Norwegian app, but it's also available in English in the app. Also on the front page of the app when you check the weather you get a cloud image that helps with let you know what type of clouds that's predicted. The Yr app also has indication for the KP forecast for Auroras as well.
Great video Mark!!! I also use the Clear Outside app along with the Windy app. Something else you need to take into consideration for predicting fog, with the temp and dew point, is the humidity. High humidity is better for fog.
On various trips to the US I was amazed how accurate the weather forecasts were in general. Understandable, in retrospect, given the geographic nature of the country. Ever heard of British weather. I wonder how accurate this app would be for the UK.
Thanks for another great informative video - just downloaded the app. There's high possibility of fog in my area based on the correlation you mentioned. Will be ready for that.
Great Video! I have used clear outside for years. I have the clouds down pat and usually hit the sunset right on. However I was always disappointed with the fog line. Thanks for the tip on checking the temp vs dew point line.
I discovered Clear Outside to help my astrophotography, but it’s very useful for terrestrial photography, too (as well as general outdoor activities). Great video!
It’s also good for predicting inverse cloud… rain few days before day of photography… high pressure, Dew Point and Humidity need to be 97 or above… Including now wind… Slightest breeze no inverse cloud… Spring and Autumn time… 2 days max light rain before day of photography…. On the day high pressure, with Dew and Humidity both in 98…. Sometimes works at 95….. No wind…. Last point a valley use the hills….
A couple of other parameters involved in predicting mist are humidity and wind speed; higher humidity rating and less wind increases the likelihood of misty conditions. These need to be considered together with the dew point, which is the temp at which the suspended water molecules (ie measured by humidity) will condense and the reason why dew point close to the temp is important.
Thanks for this program. Full moon this Sunday. Only 15 cloud cover in my area. Weather report was stating cloudy, now I know how little or much. Should be successful trip to a lake to capture The Cold Moon.
I'm glad that you are finding the app useful. I have been using it for a few years now and find it to be VERY inaccurate. I think the problem is that it is not able to predict the cloud seeding. Where I am in the UK, we have lost nearly all our sunrises and sunsets due to the amount of low cloud.
I wanted to like your suggestion, Clear Outside, but didn’t like how you could not change the home page to your location (I am in the USA). But you gave me an idea of what to look for and I think I found a better fit for my needs, Weather Strip. 😊
I come from an Astronomy back ground and this app is supplied from a company called First Light Optics which is based in Exeter in Devon, England, I used to by my Telescope equipment there as it's not too far from me in Plymouth (where the Pilgrim Fathers sailed from) So I have been using this great app for many years, although I now use it for photography, Astronomy is difficult in the SW of the UK due to the fact we are a very cloudy area hence my move from Astrophotography to Landscape Photography
Thanks for a great explanation. I’ve used clear for a couple years for cloud, but have never used the dew pt and temp as a fog predictor. Live and learn. My other fav app is Photo Pills. Can’t live with out these two
I've been using Clear Outside for a long time and really like it. However, I always wonder why the high cloud display is at the bottom and the low cloud display is at the top. 🤔
Nice video Mark. Thank you install now this app. Can I ask what you do if forecast is not so good but you "must" to go shoot. For example when you have your workshop, or come to location and know that you be there for couple days and cant wait for good weather. Do you go shoot? Do you shoot only details (with telephoto) not big vista?
I switched to Astrospheric, mainly because it has a more visual representation and a map of cloud movement. The other app I use is Windy, particularly when traveling as Astropheric doesn't work in Norway or Iceland.
I used this app for several years. It’s the only app I’ve found that gives the low, medium, and high cloud percentages. Plus it allows to save several locations, why is this important? For me, that gives me information about the cloud conditions in the direction I’m shooting which will give me a better idea if the far horizon (some 25 - 100 miles away) will be clear or cloudy. If the horizon is pretty clear, the better the chance the clouds in the area I’m shooting will “light-up.” But, I also rely on other weather apps, Weather Mate and Windy.
Good app and use of it! Meterologically, is there an upper temperature that a matching dew point does not produce fog? I expect it is best close to 0°C
For fog, an additional condition is not too much wind. I wish there was an app that notifies you when a certain group of conditions is met in your area. I'd make one for fog, sunsets and astrophotography. I'd pay for that app.
Yes, this is a critical third element. Wind disperses fog. I suspect that the "Fog" indicator in Clear Outside is actually a combination of the Dew point/temperature calculation with the predicted wind speed. In fact, I imagine that's true for all apps that predict fog. The other element that is not mentioned here is the weather prediction model being used. Some apps let you switch among different weather models, and you can often see significant differences in the resulting predictions. I often use Ventusky, which gives you the ability to select which model to use.
I was hoping the app would also include humidity. I live in a dry climate and think even if the dew point and temp are close to each other, if the air is dry, there still may not be enough moisture in the air to create fog like you might find in more humid climates.
The Clear Outside app has not/will not work on the last few versions of Android & there's no sign from the devs that any update is pending. I use the Astrospheric app, which seems to be a significant step up from Clear Outside - and it's working just fine on Android 15.
Yes, Ventusky is great. I use it along with Clear Outside -- the text table format of Clear Outside is efficient for some things, and the visual/map format of Ventusky is efficient for other things.
Yes, came here to mention Ventusky. I often use it in combination with Clear Outside, for the exact reason you stated: it displays its forecasts visually on a map, rather than in a text table, like Clear Outside does. That means it's easy to see if, for example, there's no clouds where you are, but there are clouds 20 miles down the road. It can be especially handy when I have a day to photograph, but don't really care where I go. The night before, I can look at cloud and fog maps for the whole region -- i.e. for everywhere that's within driving distance, so I can pick which direction to go the next day.
Hi Mark! Seems the app isn't compatible with Android 14...or my Samsung S22+...per the comments in the Google Play Store. Hopefully, there will be an update now that your video is out...so maybe hold onto your phone a bit longer...LOL!
Just tried to download the app on my Android & it says it's not available for me because it was made for an older version of Android. So hopefully the developers are working on that, otherwise I'm SOL.
I recently purchased the Samsung S 24 Ultra. I went to my app store, and it says the app is not available for my device. I'm not sure if it's an android thing or what? Oh, well. I'll just have to keep winging it! LOL
I live near mountains and find that this app (along with all the others I've tried) are not great at predicting cloud cover and fog. I think the mountains add a level of complexity?
@@MarkDenneyPhoto yes i just checked again as been a few months still no compatible version available. guessing its not being maintained? maybe thats the price for it being free
Thanks Mark for this great tip. I shoot on Cape Cod where the weather is always changing. This is definitely going to help me prepare for my shoots. GordonTempestPhotography
PS to my earlier comment. In reading the comments there's a lot saying it doesn't work for recent android phones. I've used it with a Samsung 23+ for nearly 2 years so I'm not sure why others are having problems.
I haven't found it to be all that accurate. Plus, there are things that don't seem to make sense - like right now in my area, it is showing 47/0/0 for low/middle/high, yet it is showing 100 for total. How can that be?
***ANDROID USERS*** You can still use it but via a web browser. The info is exactly the same.
?? I've got it on my Samsung
I've been using their android app for more than five years, but yes, there's a website as well...
Thanks for the info! May be device dependent. I get an "incompatible device" notice in the app store for my Pixel 6 pro. I'll try the web version.
Thanks for the recommendation. Not sure about iOS, but it looks like the android app hasn't been updated since 2015. Also unfortunately the web version doesn't seem to be quite as polished, but hope they can improve it soon. Fyi, meteoblue meteograms, while not exactly the same, gives a similar way to visualize cloud levels and density, and is free as well.
Says it's not supported on my android.
Thank you for this! I just used this app to plan a trip to the Oregon Coast (Bandon), and it was so helpful AND accurate.
I wanted to offer you a video(s) idea. You touched upon it briefly in this video: weather conditions.
I’m still pretty new to photography in general, and I loved the tidbit about how clouds higher in the skies are preferable than low ones at sunset.
I’d love to see a video that goes into various weather conditions, their pros/cons, and some guidelines as to how to photograph in them. Just general concepts.
Anyhow, thanks for all you do! I look forward to your videos every week.
Been using this app for years. Night photography to start. When I saw the fog section I fell in love. I even created a pdf on how to read it for my camera club’s website.
Great video Mark!
Glad to hear it was helpful!
I'm so glad you did an episode on the phone app. I have used it in the past and played around with it to see what the features can do. I'm also glad you mentioned the fog portion of the app and explained the settings regarding how to somewhat 'predict' when fog may occur. Again, another great informative episode on a very useful topic. Thank you very much for the video.
Thank you, Mark. I’ve been using Clear Outside since one of your earlier recommendations and I agree it’s one of the most accurate fog predictors when the temperature and dewpoint match or get within a point or two of each other AND there is no rain at the same time. I also think Windy is a very accurate fog predictor. It has a fog screen and you can hit play or slowly scroll the timeline on the bottom for seven days and watch the fog develop and then fade. If both Clear Outside and Windy tell me there’s fog - I am there. Together I find them almost 100% accurate. I also use Windy for its cloud screens. You can choose high, low, medium, and overall clouds. When Clear Outside tells me it’s all or mostly all high clouds I use Windy to see where the clouds actually are going to be in relation to where I am. Sometimes Clear Outside tells me there are clouds but Windy may show the cloud line breaks in the direction I plan on photographing (mountains , ocean, etc.) maybe a little too complicated but it has allowed me to shift my planned location slightly and has helped. I don’t cancel a trip because no matter what you just need to be out there. Again thanks for everything Mark, great information all the time.
Have been using Clear Outside for years, but not for landscape. I am using it for Milky Way photography. Will start using it for landscape.
Me too
Thank you for the reminder about this app, Mark! I downloaded it years ago and never really used it. I had forgotten I had it! Your explanation was perfect…I’ve moved it front and center. Ready to try it with a fresh approach! Thanks again.
I've used the app for sunset/sunrise clouds and agree with your enthusiasm. Your insight into the Dew Point/fog correlation was new to me. Thanks for giving me a new tool!
Good video Mark. Talking about predicting fog, looking at the relative humidity is also a great indicator, especially when it's in excess of 90%. Have a great Christmas
Very useful Mark! Side note: on 12/10 I was driving south from Denver on 1-25 in Colorado. We had a dry snow of 4-5 inches the night before. As I got closer to Pikes Peak I could see that winds were blowing the snow off the ridges. Creating this amazing sparkle. It was bright out with a just wisp of clouds on the summit. Beautiful view but no camera to do it justice. Anyway I see this app will forecast by lat/lon so could be useful for winter mountain compositions or sand dunes!
I rarely "subscribe" to You Tube channels. Especially "photography" related channels even though I do a lot of photography...I'm retired so plenty of time for that. A BIG THANKS for this video. I had that app already but didn't know how to use it until I saw this video and you explained it from A to Z. Weather is so important and yet not much attention is paid to understanding the "weather". So I have "Subscribed" and of course "liked". You do a great job on all your videos and I am now go to use you as my "Number 1 go to" source for photography related information. And, I am now following you on Instagram as well. Thanks Mark.
Thanks Mark! I used the app to plan for fog this morning on my regular walk and it accurately predicted fog!
One note on a mist: a wind, elevation and thermal mass greatly affects probability of it if a dew point is a bit higher than an ambient temperature.
That's why it is much harder to see mist in the city where buildings and roads absorbed a lot of heat, but if you go into park or lake there would be much higher chance finding mist in those edge conditions. Forests are even better as they are more moist and less heated so one could be more courageous when planning a shoot.
BTW I like your phone case, if it works why bother, we're not instagram models 🙂
Clear Outside has been languishing on my iPhone for quite some time, upstaged by the likes of Astrospheric and Windy. Thanks for the reminder of its cloud forecasts by level and temperature/humidity forecasts, presented in a straightforward display.
Thank you for this Mark always looking for helpful tools that are easy.
I mainly use Yr for weather, and I've found it to be the most useful app for checking the weather. Now, Yr is a Norwegian app, but it's also available in English in the app. Also on the front page of the app when you check the weather you get a cloud image that helps with let you know what type of clouds that's predicted. The Yr app also has indication for the KP forecast for Auroras as well.
Thanks for explaining the App Mark! Very helpful 😊
Great video Mark!!! I also use the Clear Outside app along with the Windy app. Something else you need to take into consideration for predicting fog, with the temp and dew point, is the humidity. High humidity is better for fog.
Glad you enjoyed it!
I’ve used this weather app for a few years now, it’s fantastic for us Landscape photographers, thanks for sharing 👍🏻😎🇦🇺
That temp/ dew point tip is gold. I find the “fog” numbers to be accurate maybe 50% of the time. I’ll try that other method. Thanks Mark!
thank you.........I don't use a lot of apps in my photography, except Photo Pills.......this one will be added TODAY!! Have a wonderful holiday!!!!!
It’s a great app, I’ve used it for a couple years. Thanks for the dew point/temp trick, I’ll have to keep my eye out on that.
On various trips to the US I was amazed how accurate the weather forecasts were in general. Understandable, in retrospect, given the geographic nature of the country.
Ever heard of British weather. I wonder how accurate this app would be for the UK.
It is supplied by First Light Optics, a company that supplies Astronomy equipment based in Exeter, Devon. I live in Plymouth and I use it daily
I've used this app for years. I've really found it useful and accurate. Very good video.
I started using this app after seeing an earlier video of yours, it's been great. Thanks for sharing.
It’s a handy app. I consult it often.
Thanks for another great informative video - just downloaded the app. There's high possibility of fog in my area based on the correlation you mentioned. Will be ready for that.
Thanks - after spending the last week in Tetons with clouds, fog and amazing light, this is something new to try!
Great Video! I have used clear outside for years. I have the clouds down pat and usually hit the sunset right on. However I was always disappointed with the fog line. Thanks for the tip on checking the temp vs dew point line.
Great info, as always.
Thanks, I look forward to using this app.
Awesome app. It’s been part of my planning work flow for a long time along with TPE.
I have this app but really didn’t know how to use it. Thanks for explaining this. Now I can use it better.
Glad you found it helpful!
Thanks for the tips. I've had the app for a while, but never really figured out how to use it.
Thank you ! I didn't knew about Dew point.... will use it!
I primarily use the app to help determine cloud cover at night. Excellent app for astro photography. I'll need to begin using at sunrise
Yep best app using this for years great vlog😊
Thank you for the tips!!
I’ve been looking for a way to predict fog in my area. Thanks for the good word!
Thanks Mark. I'll try this out. I've got a location that I'm going to this weekend that this app may be extremely helpful. At least, I hope so.
I discovered Clear Outside to help my astrophotography, but it’s very useful for terrestrial photography, too (as well as general outdoor activities). Great video!
Agree I’ve used this and Astrospheric for years for astro photography
It’s also good for predicting inverse cloud… rain few days before day of photography… high pressure, Dew Point and Humidity need to be 97 or above… Including now wind… Slightest breeze no inverse cloud… Spring and Autumn time… 2 days max light rain before day of photography…. On the day high pressure, with Dew and Humidity both in 98…. Sometimes works at 95….. No wind…. Last point a valley use the hills….
Thank you very much! Very useful ❤ Been looking for a similar app for cloud indicators for a long time!
You're welcome! Glad it was helpful!
Awesome information! Thank you.
What a great tip -- just downloaded!
A couple of other parameters involved in predicting mist are humidity and wind speed; higher humidity rating and less wind increases the likelihood of misty conditions. These need to be considered together with the dew point, which is the temp at which the suspended water molecules (ie measured by humidity) will condense and the reason why dew point close to the temp is important.
Hi Mark, it even works in the Kingdom of Belgium ! :-) .... Great ! Kind regards, Guy.
Thanks for this program. Full moon this Sunday. Only 15 cloud cover in my area. Weather report was stating cloudy, now I know how little or much. Should be successful trip to a lake to capture The Cold Moon.
Thank you Mark. Do you use Photo Pills or Photgrapher's Ephemeris for sunrise/sunset?
I'm glad that you are finding the app useful. I have been using it for a few years now and find it to be VERY inaccurate. I think the problem is that it is not able to predict the cloud seeding. Where I am in the UK, we have lost nearly all our sunrises and sunsets due to the amount of low cloud.
Also, I you need little to no wind for fog. Worth adding.
I wanted to like your suggestion, Clear Outside, but didn’t like how you could not change the home page to your location (I am in the USA). But you gave me an idea of what to look for and I think I found a better fit for my needs, Weather Strip. 😊
I come from an Astronomy back ground and this app is supplied from a company called First Light Optics which is based in Exeter in Devon, England, I used to by my Telescope equipment there as it's not too far from me in Plymouth (where the Pilgrim Fathers sailed from)
So I have been using this great app for many years, although I now use it for photography, Astronomy is difficult in the SW of the UK due to the fact we are a very cloudy area hence my move from Astrophotography to Landscape Photography
this why Exeter is the default location then for me in Nottingham!
Thank you! This is a really helpful app! By the way, my iphone is an 11 pro and the case is just like yours! Phone is still humming along nicely!
I’ve used this app for many years and my most used app
Thanks for a great explanation. I’ve used clear for a couple years for cloud, but have never used the dew pt and temp as a fog predictor.
Live and learn.
My other fav app is Photo Pills. Can’t live with out these two
Glad it was helpful!
I've been using Clear Outside for a long time and really like it. However, I always wonder why the high cloud display is at the bottom and the low cloud display is at the top. 🤔
My favorite for Astro too.
Nice video Mark. Thank you install now this app. Can I ask what you do if forecast is not so good but you "must" to go shoot. For example when you have your workshop, or come to location and know that you be there for couple days and cant wait for good weather. Do you go shoot? Do you shoot only details (with telephoto) not big vista?
I also look at temp and dew point to see what issues there maybe for condensation on the lense. Thanks.
I use from 4 years for astrophotography, very good app
I switched to Astrospheric, mainly because it has a more visual representation and a map of cloud movement. The other app I use is Windy, particularly when traveling as Astropheric doesn't work in Norway or Iceland.
Wonderful i even get data for France and my own location 👏👏👍
I used this app for several years. It’s the only app I’ve found that gives the low, medium, and high cloud percentages. Plus it allows to save several locations, why is this important? For me, that gives me information about the cloud conditions in the direction I’m shooting which will give me a better idea if the far horizon (some 25 - 100 miles away) will be clear or cloudy. If the horizon is pretty clear, the better the chance the clouds in the area I’m shooting will “light-up.” But, I also rely on other weather apps, Weather Mate and Windy.
Good app and use of it! Meterologically, is there an upper temperature that a matching dew point does not produce fog? I expect it is best close to 0°C
For fog, an additional condition is not too much wind. I wish there was an app that notifies you when a certain group of conditions is met in your area. I'd make one for fog, sunsets and astrophotography. I'd pay for that app.
So many fail to take wind into consideration
@@KaosK9 and humitidy over 90% :)
Yes, this is a critical third element. Wind disperses fog. I suspect that the "Fog" indicator in Clear Outside is actually a combination of the Dew point/temperature calculation with the predicted wind speed. In fact, I imagine that's true for all apps that predict fog.
The other element that is not mentioned here is the weather prediction model being used. Some apps let you switch among different weather models, and you can often see significant differences in the resulting predictions. I often use Ventusky, which gives you the ability to select which model to use.
🔥QUICK QUESTION: What mobile app do you use most for photography?
iOS camera ❤
Camera app and instagram lol
@@bubbachua 👍
Golden Hour
PhotoPills
I was hoping the app would also include humidity. I live in a dry climate and think even if the dew point and temp are close to each other, if the air is dry, there still may not be enough moisture in the air to create fog like you might find in more humid climates.
Got the app and I don't know how to express my feeling for having it known! ❤❤😂😂
Clear Outside was originally developed by First Light Optics in the UK for astronomical use, this could possibly explain why everything's metric
Thank you
THanks!
I just tried to download Clear Outside, and it won't work on my type of Android. Do you have another suggestion?
I have a similar problem with my Samsung A14. Notified that it does not work on my phone.
The Clear Outside app has not/will not work on the last few versions of Android & there's no sign from the devs that any update is pending. I use the Astrospheric app, which seems to be a significant step up from Clear Outside - and it's working just fine on Android 15.
I use the Ventusky app especially for clouds.
Yes, Ventusky is great. I use it along with Clear Outside -- the text table format of Clear Outside is efficient for some things, and the visual/map format of Ventusky is efficient for other things.
Ventusky Pro also has the cloud Layers and fog, but displays it conveniently on the map
Yes, came here to mention Ventusky. I often use it in combination with Clear Outside, for the exact reason you stated: it displays its forecasts visually on a map, rather than in a text table, like Clear Outside does. That means it's easy to see if, for example, there's no clouds where you are, but there are clouds 20 miles down the road.
It can be especially handy when I have a day to photograph, but don't really care where I go. The night before, I can look at cloud and fog maps for the whole region -- i.e. for everywhere that's within driving distance, so I can pick which direction to go the next day.
Thanks!
Mark: Wonder if you could recommend a small sling bag to carry a Fuji X100 plus an Osmo Pocket 3 with some accessories. Thank you.
Sadly, it's not available for my newer version of the Android phone. However, I did find Atmospheric, which does work on my phone and iPadd
Almost to 300k subscribers!! Way to go! Just shows you put out great/useful content.
Crazy to think!! Thanks James!
I don't think you mentioned it, but this app would be extremely helpful if you are planning astrophotography too.
Hi Mark! Seems the app isn't compatible with Android 14...or my Samsung S22+...per the comments in the Google Play Store. Hopefully, there will be an update now that your video is out...so maybe hold onto your phone a bit longer...LOL!
Outstanding, Mark…thanks so much!
Unfortunately, it is not available for the Android version I use, but only for older ones. I hope it will be adapted to newer versions.
Works for latest Android on Google Pixel 7 Pro
Just tried to download the app on my Android & it says it's not available for me because it was made for an older version of Android. So hopefully the developers are working on that, otherwise I'm SOL.
Does not look like the devs are working on it. I use the Astrospheric app, which I think is better overall anyway.
I have it but perhaps have not used it as much as I should have.
I recently purchased the Samsung S 24 Ultra. I went to my app store, and it says the app is not available for my device. I'm not sure if it's an android thing or what?
Oh, well. I'll just have to keep winging it! LOL
Funny. I've been using Clear Outside for two years but for Astrophotography. I only cared about a line of "0" for total cloud.
I live near mountains and find that this app (along with all the others I've tried) are not great at predicting cloud cover and fog. I think the mountains add a level of complexity?
Tried to load web version and like "play store" it too said not available for my Android device.
Same for me, app won't work on my phone
Very interested in this. I have been using my Subset for over 3 years in iPhone and it also works great.
tried to download app but not available on my android, this app only for older android phones
i miss this app. on the latest android it is not compatible.
Ugh that stinks - it’s such a good kne
@@MarkDenneyPhoto yes i just checked again as been a few months still no compatible version available. guessing its not being maintained? maybe thats the price for it being free
Would you say that this app is more accurate than a general weather forecast?
Maybe if you started the video with the name of the App first.
So what is the name of the free app please.
Thanks Mark for this great tip. I shoot on Cape Cod where the weather is always changing. This is definitely going to help me prepare for my shoots. GordonTempestPhotography
PS to my earlier comment. In reading the comments there's a lot saying it doesn't work for recent android phones. I've used it with a Samsung 23+ for nearly 2 years so I'm not sure why others are having problems.
I haven't found it to be all that accurate. Plus, there are things that don't seem to make sense - like right now in my area, it is showing 47/0/0 for low/middle/high, yet it is showing 100 for total. How can that be?
Thanks, but doesn't work on Android. I have a Google 8 Pixel pro.
You can use it via the web browser on your phone if you have a newer model.
Ja polecam Pogoda&Radar i Meteo ICM