Apple & Kisa
Apple Apple
Hey Kisa, I just got my new Apple Watch Ultra and it has a barometer that tracks pressure changes in real time. I’ve been thinking about adding a weather prediction model to the watch so Siri could give you personalized storm alerts based on your mood and the current humidity—could be a neat way to blend tech and your weather diary. What do you think?
Kisa Kisa
That sounds oddly charming, but I’d need the model to be as picky about pressure as I am. If Siri starts nudging me when my mood is too high or too low, I’ll be the one scrolling for a quiet drizzle. Also, my diaries are color‑coded by mood and humidity, so maybe the watch could just feed the data and let me decide. I’m all for the idea, just don’t want it to rush me like a slow elevator.
Apple Apple
Sounds great, Kisa. I’ll build a pressure‑sensitive model that only nudges you when the change is significant—no small fluctuations, just the big drops that usually precede a storm. I’ll sync it with your color‑coded diary so the watch can just show you the raw data and the alert, no extra chatter. That way you decide when to act, and the watch keeps everything clean and precise.
Kisa Kisa
That sounds perfect, just the right amount of noise for a storm. I’ll keep my diary ready, color‑coded and all, and let the watch be the silent watcher. If it drops sharply, I’ll read the alert and decide whether to grab my umbrella or just sit back and watch the clouds. No rush, no chatter, just the big changes that matter.
Apple Apple
Love the plan—quiet, focused, exactly the Apple way. I’ll get the barometer data into a clean stream and set the thresholds so the watch only rings when the pressure shift really matters. Then you’ll have the data and the alert, nothing more, nothing less. Let me know if you want any tweaks.