This will be a list of currently available Macintosh native Weather Station software. As support changes and/or new products become available, I'll update this list. If anyone has an update, please post it below or send me a PM, and I'll add it to this post. Opinions and comments are mine, and do not reflect input from developers. Developer comments from web sites are in quotes. I am not affiliated with any of the following products, although I have tried out WeatherLink, WeatherCat, Weather Display, and WeatherSnoop.
Before purchasing, be sure that you review the web page and are sure that your weather station hardware is supported!
Davis' WeatherLink for MacDoes not have all of the functionality of the Windows version. Almost everyone decides to move to one of the third-party options. WeatherLink for Mac is initially required for setting up the Davis Weather Envoy, but not for any weather station model with a Console.
NOTE: Open "Get Info" and check off "Open in 32-bit mode" to operate on Mac OS X 10.6 and higher
Included with #6520 USB Data Logger ($165 USD)
MacUpdate review linkAdd this popular model of WeatherLink to any Vantage station or Weather Envoy. Suitable for everyone from the home weather buff to the most demanding scientific user. Store weather data even when it's not connected to a computer. Later, download the data and use the software for detailed analysis and graphing.
Trixology's WeatherCatWeatherCat is probably the "middle-ground" option. It is very Mac-like in use and configuration, and meets many user's needs for customization, flexibility, and ease of use. Using built-in functionality and user contributed scripts and templates, it can send data to Weather Underground, CWOP, PWSweather, AWEKAS, UK Met Office, various international weather networks and Twitter.
Weather Cat is 42 GBP (currently $68 USD) A fully-functional 14 day trial is available.
MacUpdate review link'WeatherCat is weather station software for Macintosh computers."
Trixology's WeatherCat is weather software designed to work with a variety of weather station hardware and featuring real-time gauges, synchronized graphs, daily data, and satellite imagery for any date in its database, a variety of reports for different time periods, webcam integration, custom graphs, and more.
Weather DisplayWeather Display is probably the biggest third-party weather software on the PC side, and has a wide following with Mac users, especially those who have moved over from using the PC version. It is extremely configurable and customizable, but has a steeper learning curve. Weather Display can send to all of the services WeatherCat does and more. Brian is good about answering questions seemingly any time of the day.
Weather Display is $60 USD. A fully-functional 30 day trial is available.
Weather Display is the software to get the most from your weather station. Not only does it support a huge range of stations from all the major manufacturers but it's also stacked with features and options. These include real time, auto scale and graph history graphing, FTP of the weather data to your web page, pager and email notifications of extreme conditions, web download, Metar/ Synop emails, averages/extreme/climate/NOAA reports, web cam upload, grouped file uploads, FTP downloads, decoded metar download's, APRS output (internet and direct com port as well) ,WAP, direct web cam capture, animated web cam images, weatherdials, weather voice, weather answer phone, use of Dallas 1 wire sensors (such as lightning counter, solar sensor, barometer sensor and extra temperature/humidity sensors with any weather station), use a Labjack to add extra temperature or humidity sensor to your existing weather station (USB)... and lots more!
Tee-Boy's WeatherSnoopWeatherSnoop surpasses the others on simplicity and ease of use, but at the expense of customization. If you just want to see your weather station data on your computer and upload it to Weather Underground, CWOP, and WeatherBug, then WeatherSnoop is for you!
WeatherSnoop is $20 USD for the Lite version or $60 USD for the full version. Free Trial for unlimited 3-hour sessions.
MacUpdate Review linkWeatherSnoopฎ connects your Mac to your favorite weather station or Internet-based data source to provide you with a rich graphical representation of your weather data, along with numerous data management and sharing features. And it has the look and feel that you expect from a Mac application.
Afterten Software's WeatherTracker WeatherTracker has not been updated since 2010, and the support forum is closed (email support only.) There have been mixed reports on MacWeather.net about getting replies from emailed support requests. I would recommend trying to contact the developer about any pending updates and continued support.
WeatherTracker is $40 USD. A fully-functional 30 day trial is available.
MacUpdate review linkGet the realtime weather out of your console and in into your computer then into the world.
[EDIT] Got a PM from AfterTen developer Dean Davis that "WeatherTracker from AfterTen is back to being fully supported. I just issued and update to version 1.5.3." Thanks Dean!
wviewI have no experience with wview, so be sure to read through the web page to see if it meets your needs.
wview is "donationware"
Fast Generation Non-GUI, Headless, Lightweight Multi-Lingual US or Metric Units Extended Sensor Support SQLite3 Archive Format MySQL/PostgreSQL Export RSS Weather Feeds Runs on the Linksys NSLU2 and SheevaPlug Embeddable 24x7x365 Reliability.
wview is a collection of unix daemons which interface with a supported weather station to retrieve archive records (if generated by the station) and current conditions.
WeeWXI have no experience with WeeWX, so be sure to read through the web page to see if it meets your needs.
WeeWX is Open Source
WeeWX runs on any version of MacOS(X) that has Python (I have tested it on systems back to 10.6.8, not sure about earlier versions), and it works with over 70 different types of hardware (see the 'hardware' link at the weewx.com web site).
Like CumulusMX and wview, WeeWX does not have a graphic user interface - it is a daemon that runs in the background. When data come in from the instrument(s), WeeWX saves the data to a database then spits out html, text, or pretty much any other type of report that you want. You can see some of the reports people have created by browsing the 'showcase' and 'map' links at the weewx.com web site.
UnderTheWXI have no experience with UnderTheWX, as I do not have the AcuRite weather station, so be sure to read through the web page to see if it meets your needs.
UnderTheWX is Free on the Mac App Store
UnderTheWX reads weather data off the popular AcuRite USB Professional Weather Centers and uploads it to Weather Underground, Weathercloud.net, PWSWeather and WOW.
The app is a Status Bar Menu which displays Temperature, Humidity, Wind speed and direction, Rainfall and Barometer. UnderTheWX supports the AcuRite 01025, 01036, 02032, 02064 and 06037M USB Personal Weather Stations.
Uploading data to Weather Underground is also supported using the latest "Rapid Fire" update feature.
Whichever route you end up going, be sure to join the user forums for that software for great tips, user supplied templates, camaraderie, etc.
Steve