In brief: In today’s post we discuss the ongoing rain chances for today and through the weekend, as well as the arrival of a new round of Saharan dust. We also are happy to share the news that we think we have finally tackled the notification issue on the Apple version of our app.
Yes, we think app notifications are finally fixed
As many users of our Space City Weather app installed on Apple devices know all too well, notifications on that platform have been broken. After installing, they’ll work for a couple of weeks and then stop. This has been annoying for you and a giant pain in the butt for us. We tried several things to fix it, only to have the problem return.
Now, we think—all fingers and toes crossed!—that we have solved it. Hussain Abbasi, our developer, initially wrote the app in a Microsoft coding tool that lost support this year. Meanwhile, Apple changed the way app notifications are handled, but Microsoft didn’t update its older tool to account for that. Once Hussain realized this, he began the painful process of recreating the app in the new version of Microsoft’s coding tool that does use Apple’s latest notification system. What at first appeared to be a minor bug fix turned out to be, as they say, a heavy lift.

We released the app a few weeks ago, quietly, to see if it indeed fixed the problem. And it appears to have done that. There are still a few bugs in the new version, which is to be expected since it’s essentially a rewrite of the app. We hope to have some bug-fix updates coming in the next few days and weeks. In the interim, you may notice that weather data loads a little slowly at first. And some iPhone and Mac users are reporting the app crashes upon launch, but that appears to be rare and the cause has been identified.
If you have updates set to auto-install on your device, you already have the new version. If you haven’t updated and want notifications back, feel free to download it. (it might help to uninstall the old version before installing the new one.)
Note that this only applies to users of Apple devices. The Android version is, for now, unchanged, but our upcoming releases will address some issues there, too, including the occasional crash on, weirdly, Pixel 9 phones only. Go figure.
Thanks for using our app! We’re working to make it better for you.

Thursday
The atmospheric setup supports another day of variable shower activity today, with some areas likely to pick up 1 inch of rainfall and other locations seeing only dark clouds and distant lightning. Overall rain chances are about 50 percent, with the most likely time for showers from late this morning through the early evening hours. The proximity of rain will help keep high temperatures in the vicinity of 90 degrees for most locations. And yes, while this is fairly warm, I’d remind you that it is but a taste of what is coming in terms of summer time heat for Houston. (i.e. see the forecast for next week). Rain chances will slacken for the overnight hours, with low temperatures falling into the mid- to upper-70s.
Friday and Saturday
These days will be similar, with partly to mostly sunny skies and high temperatures of around 90 degrees, or just above. They will also be subject to hit-or-miss showers, but I expect coverage to be less, perhaps 30 percent daily. Winds will generally be light, from the south, at 5 to 10 mph. Beginning Saturday or Saturday night we might being to see some hazy skies due to an increase in Saharan dust.
Sunday and Monday
Sunday, and possibly Monday, will bring another shot of decent rain, perhaps 50 percent daily. Accumulations don’t look overly impressive, but some locations may quickly pick up half an inch of rain. Highs on Sunday may top out around 90 degrees, but we should climb into the lower 90s by Monday.

Next week
As high pressure builds nearby we are going to see mostly sunny weather. Temperatures will start out in the mid 90s (coastal areas will be a bit cooler) with highs likely approaching the upper 90s toward the end of next week. Skies will be mostly sunny, but the lingering presence of Saharan dust should help moderate dewpoints slightly. So very hot, and quite humid—but not sizzling humid maybe. We’ll still have a daily chance of shower activity along the sea breeze, primarily during the afternoon hours, but these chances are likely on the order of 20 percent. Basically, it’s going to feel very summer-like out there.

I have the crash issue too on my Google Pixel 8 Pro! It’s been happening for maybe a year or so. If I open a new article from a notification it constantly tries to crash but if you try and continue to scroll and deny the crashes you can begrudgingly get through the article.
When a crash happens, please send us a feedback report. (go to where you choose a city, tap the gear icon, tap Send Feedback)
Evacuate Katy teehee. I love it.
A total of 4″ here yesterday near Ellington, including a sunset downpour which kept us in the gym lobby for about 10 minutes.
I’m in Clear Lake near JSC and got 2.5″. Didn’t seem like that much.
Wait! You both got rain?? None here on the west side.
The last rain we had was a week ago last Monday. Sprinklers have been working.
Those lows are impressive, and I welcome them. Anything below 80!
Uhhh, I got the update a week or two ago, and for me and my iPhone, the notifications are worse. I had all notifications off, and now I sometimes get them for the daily post. But I don’t think I’m getting them every day, just some days. And, the problem where I only want the alerts and not the daily posts remains. If I turn the daily off and turn the alerts on, go back up to Settings and then back into Notifications, the daily notifications are turned back on.
Joe, please go into the settings for the app and send us a feedback report. (go to where you choose a city, tap the gear icon, tap Send Feedback)
I don’t want the repressive heat to come. I’m dreading it. I visited my hometown in South Texas a few weeks ago and it was around 103-105 for all the days I was there. I remembered quickly how terrible that sort of heat can be.
Bringing my NOAA Hurricane radio to and from work lately, not because of anything from SCW, but just seeing the raw forecasts of storms has me a little bit on-edge I suppose. Glad we’ve been having rain and that it is just rain.
I read that as of June 30th, the Special Sensor Microwave Imager Sounder (SSMIS) data run by NOAA & DOD satellites will no longer be sending the real-time microwave data needed for hurricane forecasting.
That this represents a reduction of 50% of data and now it will be difficult to detect activities such as rapid intensification and where the storms are going.
How did temps in the 80s get to be post apocalyptic hellscape colors in WeatherBell temp forecast? The color green got banished to 130 degrees lol.