Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

Facebook now lets you check the weather forecast on mobile and desktop

Add as a preferred source on Google

Facebook is targeting weather apps with its latest update for desktop, iOS, and Android. The social network is rolling out a weather tool that offers a five-day forecast, along with personalization options and notifications.

You may have spotted limited weather data in other sections on Facebook, such as places and events pages, but this info is restricted to the temperature and a one-word forecast summary (i.e., sunny). However, Facebook’s new offering is a complete weather tool that is more akin to Yahoo Weather and Apple’s Weather app.

Recommended Videos

Located in the Facebook app’s ever-expanding “more” menu bar, next to other tabs including “events,” “pages,” and “Moments,” the weather feature is automatically set to your current location. You can tap the settings icon at the top right of the display to add additional locations, and change the temperature to either Fahrenheit or Celsius. Desktop users can find the weather in the shortcuts sidebar on the News Feed.

The tool offers an hourly forecast for the day, with highs and lows regarding temperature, plus a five-day forecast with similar information. Facebook’s weather data is supplied by The Weather Company’s application programming interface, a link to its website can also be found at the bottom of the feature.

You can switch between your saved locations via the settings tab. Additionally, Facebook says it will begin testing notifications next week, with all updates rolling out to users across iOS, Android and desktop in March.

The update is part of Facebook’s efforts to show people relevant messages at the top of the News Feed. Alongside reminders of events and holidays, Facebook will also display weather messages, complete with colorful cartoon images, atop the News Feed — these will include links to the complete five-day forecast.

“Our goal is to develop products that connect people to the things they care about most and create moments of joy in people’s day, like simply telling you that it’s going to rain later,” a Facebook spokesperson told Digital Trends via email.

Saqib Shah
Saqib Shah is a Twitter addict and film fan with an obsessive interest in pop culture trends. In his spare time he can be…
Snapchat Planets Meaning: Order, Rankings, and How Friend Solar System Works
Snapchat Planets turns your best friends list into a solar system, and yes, your orbit says a lot
Snapchat Planets being shown on the Snapchat app on iPhone.

Snapchat+ includes several exclusive features, but few have generated as much curiosity as Snapchat Planets. Part of the app's Friend Solar System, it transforms your Best Friends list into a planetary ranking, assigning each of your top eight friends a planet based on how often you interact.

From Mercury, which represents your closest friend, to Neptune, which represents your eighth closest, the system offers a quick visual snapshot of your interactions. But what do the different planets actually mean, and how does Snapchat decide who gets which one?

Read more
Instagram lands on Samsung TVs, with episodic series and live TV coming to your screen soon
Instagram for TV adds new features for group watching.
instagram-samsung-tv

Meta just expanded Instagram for TV to Samsung Smart TVs across the US, rolling out a bunch of new features built for group viewing. With Samsung now on board, Instagram for TV has officially landed on the three biggest connected TV platforms in the country.

https://twitter.com/metanewsroom/status/2069062429821026732?s=46

Read more
TikTok’s AI slop problem is worse than you think — and kids are seeing the most of it
TikTok

TikTok has spent years perfecting the art of knowing exactly what you want to watch next. Open the app, scroll a few times, and suddenly it’s serving videos that feel uncannily tailored to your interests. But what happens before TikTok learns who you are? According to new research from video editing platform Kapwing, the answer is increasingly AI slop.

The study found that nearly 60% of the videos shown to a brand-new TikTok account were low-quality AI-generated content. That’s not a niche problem buried in obscure corners of the platform. It’s the first impression TikTok is making on new users before the algorithm even begins personalizing their feed. And if that sounds concerning, the findings around children’s content are even harder to ignore.

Read more