Instagram's Snapchat Rival, Bolt, Just Launched in Three Countries
Instagram's new messaging app Bolt has launched in Singapore, New Zealand, and South Africa.
Instagram's new messaging app Bolt has launched in Singapore, New Zealand, and South Africa.
Facebook's strategy to create many standalone mobile apps might make sense for Facebook, but it sucks for you.
Over the next few days, if you go to send a message through Facebook's smartphone app, you'll see the alert shown above.
If you're an iOS user of the Spotify music streaming service, you'll now be able to tweak individual frequency settings thanks to a newly-integrated equaliser feature.
Hopefully it occasionally reminds you to just put your stupid phone away and enjoy the show you've paid for.
Here are our five favourite Dropbox add-ons to supercharge your storage.
A nice haul in this week's Best Apps, with Plex for Windows Phone, the Destiny Companion app, destructible file-sharing, animated screenplays, and much, much, more.
This is admittedly pretty goofy and will likely lose its appeal (quite) soon, but for now it's a decent little distraction to add a little something to your chats.
Some Instagram for Android users are reporting links posted to a "one tap photo messaging app" called Bolt.
If it's raining (or about to), the Explore feature will warn against going to a nearby park, for example.
"Imagen if Senfeld on TV today?" is a question often posed by @Seinfeld2000, an alternate universe of Seinfeld characters in contemporary situations told through garbled English and meme-ready Photoshop renderings.
One hour, $50, and five extensively researched photos later, I had only one thought: Holy shit, that was depressing.
Insight into the world of people who have more than 202 friends.
It's designed to help people navigate the basics of iOS.
This week's list of the best new things in the world of mobile apps includes Guardians of the Galaxy, a taxi service app not restricted to London, global climate information, and many, many, more.
Health tracking apps are becoming all the rage these days, but they're starting to develop apps that can monitor your mental health as well. Would you trust it?