I've used Anemoi for several years in two gliders in lumpy Vermont terrain. I was motivated enough to move it from glider #1 to glider #2, though it was on the bottom of my panel revision priority list, so it sat in a box for two years. In glider #1, it opened my eyes to how complicated wind currents are when you're flying below the Height of Land (aka below ridge line and peak). For example, I'll be flying towards a ridge across a valley with a strong wind on my six. I'm hoping to find ridge lift, or ridge triggered thermals, but once I get there, the slope has turned the wind direction to mostly run parallel to the slope. It still has an 'upslope component' but most of the energy goes sideways across the slope. So no appreciable updraft. The 'angle of incidence', the angle that the wind hits the slope seems to have a much bigger impact on wind direction that I had imagined. A few degrees from perpendicular seems to turn the wind to run across the slope. At least that's my impression, YMMV.
I've made it a habit to glance at Anemoi wind information, look at the terrain/clouds ahead, and then make a guess as to what the wind will be doing once I get closer to the terrain, then observe what the wind is actually doing when I get there. Better pilots than me say that Anemoi provides useful information to them. Me? IDK. It's sure is fun, and it holds my attention. Prior to Anemoi, I was overconfident in my mental model of what the wind was doing. Anemoi took my hubris down a notch.
I might look at it when I'm in the pattern, but I never have, because See and Avoid rivets my attention. If I were landing out, I'd try to give it more than one glance, but ground slope and obstacles dominate the choice of final leg heading. It uses GPS position drift and pitot pressure to guess wind direction, so it provides no useful information prior to takeoff. Ye Olde Windsocks are handy.
Glider #2 came with a Air Avionics Air Data Display (aka Butterfly Vario) which uses different-than-anemoi sensors and software to estimate real time wind direction (with a little arrow). The Anemoi average direction more-or-less agrees with the Butterfly average direction. Anemoi also displays 'real time wind' which is averaged over a shorter time constant. The wire that connects the Anemoi sensor unit to the display unit uses a published open, plain text protocol, so maybe some day some clever person will pipe Anemoi data into XCSoar. I'd love to see Anemoi measurements persistently displayed on a map. A wind meter? You have to integrate the data in your head.
Anemoi also includes backup AHRS, GPS based heading and track, OAT, and other potentially useful stuff. These numbers agree with my Butterfly Vario. I switch to the AHRS screen if I'm climbing fast and I'm not sure how far to go until the cloud suck catches me and the cloud blinds me. To be truly useful, I should get some 'hood time' in an airplane (not IR rated).
Anemoi may be useful for locating lines of convergence lift under blue skies. I was surprised to find usable convergence lift lines last season when conditions are practically calm (the converging air masses have a velocity of ONE knot.) Skysight wind forecast give some ideas where and when to look for convergence, and Anemoi hints whether to fly left or right to lock in on the convergence line. Oftentimes the lift is weaker than my sink rate, but then it gets a little stronger and I go up 20 feet, then a little weaker and I go down 20 feet. This is something that I'm playing around with and it is great fun when I get lucky.
Product support is very responsive.
I assume that Anemoi is as good as LXNav Hawk. So when I got curious about Hawk, it was a good fit since glider #2 came with a Butterfly Vario. I originally bought it for glider #1 out of curiosity and ran it with an LXNav V7 Vario.