App Releases
The Sway app is available on the App Store and Google Play. Updates are delivered automatically through the store.
v2.0.17 — June 2026
Section titled “v2.0.17 — June 2026”Latest release
- Live dashboard when connected to the Breeze
- Wind trend graphs with shift detection
- Barometric pressure graph
- More robust Breeze connection
Live dashboard
Section titled “Live dashboard”Open the Breeze screen while connected and you’ll see a live instrument panel: COG, SOG, speed through water, apparent and true wind, and depth — all updating every second. Each tile shows a small sparkline so you can see at a glance whether a number has been steady or moving.
Wind graphs
Section titled “Wind graphs”Below the live data, a chart tracks true wind direction, wind speed, and VMG over the last 30 minutes. It runs a trend analysis in the background and tells you plainly what the wind is doing — shifting right, shifting left, oscillating, building, or dropping. The chart also shows where the current reading sits on the compass or speed scale, making it easier to pick the right tack.
Barometric pressure graph
Section titled “Barometric pressure graph”A barometric pressure graph is now available when a NMEA 2000 barometer is connected to the network. It shows pressure over time, making it easier to spot a developing weather change before it arrives. If you don’t have one yet, the Yacht Devices YDBC-05 is a compact barometer that works well with Sway Breeze.
v2.0.16 — April 2026
Section titled “v2.0.16 — April 2026”- noforeignland integration — link your noforeignland account and have your trips uploaded automatically after each sail
- Extended user profile — you can now add a home port, bio, ship type, and more to your profile
v2.0.15 — March 2026
Section titled “v2.0.15 — March 2026”- Export Your Trips as GPX or CSV
You can now export any trip as a GPX or CSV file — straight from the app. This works for all crew members on a trip, not just the skipper. Use GPX to import your track into tools like OpenCPN, Navionics, or Google Earth. Use CSV if you want to dig into the raw data in a spreadsheet.