
EPA's AIRNow
Ta reda på om luftkvaliteten i ditt område och skydda din hälsa.
Appinformation
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Appbeskrivning
Android -Appanalys Och Granskning: EPA's AIRNow, Utvecklad Av US Environmental Protection Agency. Listad I Hälsa Och Fitness -Kategorin. Den Nuvarande Versionen Är 4.0.5, Uppdaterad 10/03/2025 . Enligt Användare Recensioner På Google Play: EPA's AIRNow. Uppnått Över 407 Tusen Installationer. EPA's AIRNow Har För Närvarande 838 Recensioner, Genomsnittlig Betyg 3.7 Stjärnor
Den AIRNow Android kommer att ge ett allt mer mobila allmänheten i realtid information om luftkvaliteten som människor kan använda för att skydda deras hälsa när de planerar sina dagliga aktiviteterAppen gör det möjligt för användare att få platsspecifika rapporter om nuvarande luftkvaliteten och prognoser luftkvalitet för både ozon och fina föroreningar partiklar (PM2,5). Luftkvalitets kartor från AIRNow hemsida ger visuella skildringar av nuvarande och prognostiserade luftkvaliteten i hela landet, och en sida på kvalitetsrelaterade hälsoeffekter luft förklarar vilka åtgärder man kan vidta för att skydda deras hälsa på olika AQI nivåer, såsom "code orange."
Vi Erbjuder För Närvarande Version 4.0.5. Detta Är Vår Senaste, Mest Optimerade Version. Det Är Lämpligt För Många Olika Enheter. Gratis Nedladdning Direkt Apk Från Google Play Store Eller Andra Versioner Vi Är Värd För. Dessutom Kan Du Ladda Ner Utan Registrering Och Ingen Inloggning Krävs.
Vi Har Mer Än 2000+ Tillgängliga Enheter För Samsung, Xiaomi, Huawei, Oppo, Vivo, Motorola, LG, Google, OnePlus, Sony, Tablet ... Med Så Många Alternativ, Det Är Enkelt För Dig Att Välja Spel Eller Programvara Som Passar Din Enhet.
Det Kan Komma Till Nytta Om Det Finns Några Landsbegränsningar Eller Några Begränsningar Från Sidan Av Din Enhet I Google App Store.
Vad Är Nytt
Minor Bug Fixes
Nya Kommentarer
Ken
My only complaint with the app used to be that I couldn't get notifications for certain air quality levels. And now they've added that, so I love this app it's great. I also love the descriptions because it helps me figure out what to expect and I feel like it's written in a way that's pretty easy to get the overall gist event if you don't get the techy terms. Nice!
Noah Silverman
Needs notifications, widgets, and automatic location. These are basic features that people have been requesting for years to make the app functional.
Paul Dulaney
Beautiful design, which was probably peer-reviewed out the kazoo by very smart people. If you're an American citizen you've already paid for this app through your taxes, so they don't care about your data and they don't show you ads. A no-brainer.
A. Spehr
Doesn't give real time data? I don't know. The website data is always several hours delayed. This doesn't give a time stamp of when it was last updated. Also doesn't let me see nearest monitors, and I'm in between several. Useful for doing a quick check of different places I'm traveling to though. But the website is probably easier to use, although much slower loading. And then load again to get actual monitor location data... So slow.
J M
Needs notifications and alerts. It's also a fair amount of clicks/taps to get to sensors near you if you're not close to an official EPA sensor. Purple Air sensors are shown on the map, and you can favorite them, but they don't show in your dashboard: you have to go back to the map and navigate to the specific sensor again. EPA, please make this app more useful for the public's primary use case --notifications.
Bryan
The map, in contour view, is straight up wrong and does not match the AirNow website. Also, you can only view current conditions in contour view, not the forecast, unlike the website. Also, if you set it to look at PM2.5 only and not ozone, it resets that setting when you toggle between contour and monitor views. Also, no widgets. So if you just want to get a quick number this might be slightly better than just going to the website, but if you want to look at the map and get a better sense...
Bob A
Would be cool if they provided trends so you can see changes over the past week from recorded data. I don't mind checking a couple times every day, but if the data exists, why not make it available and easy to see? I'd rather not write a program to collect hourly data from the website... But if I have to, I might... Maybe the devs should just make this a quick feature like a chart or something.
A Google user
Clean, easy to use interface that works great! Has a very small footprint (as in kilobytes). In addition to current readings, provides forecast and map. Plus, uses a tiny amount of data (mine averages just kilobytes over several months). Unintrusive - asks for just what it needs (only GPS). Not a battery killer either, doesn't query the GPS excessively, nor will it vampire your device performance (like some apps running/communicating constantly as a background app) Bonus - doesn't have/cause ads, nag-ware, or performance issues -- even though it's free. I've used it for years, and prefer it to (getting just) the emails because it provides updated readings throughout the day. This app is one of the first things I install whenever I change mobile devices. A 'must have' for me, I use it every day!