No I don't because some things you cannot detect yourself. Why are you asking that when we are discussing something like wind warnings which have so many obvious clues to it's presence, especially when flying a drone?
Use your senses bud. You can hear wind blowing, feel it, see things blowing in the distance, see trees swaying, over water you can see the water being affected by it. White caps form when there is a strong wind. Clouds move faster. And one important thing is a drone gets moved around by it. It's speed is different in different directions. You can clearly see all these things when flying.
Use your common sense rather than be oblivious to your surroundings and rely on a computer to tell you something you should already notice for yourself.
If your wind warning alerts failed for some reason and you lost your drone in high wind, you would be one of the people that would blame the drone.