The Week's Best Android, iPhone, iPad, and Windows Phone Apps
Let's get down to business and see what new apps are worthy of your attention. This week we have Coda for iOS, WiFiMapper, and Hotspot Shield VPN, and much more.
Let's get down to business and see what new apps are worthy of your attention. This week we have Coda for iOS, WiFiMapper, and Hotspot Shield VPN, and much more.
If you want some reading material to pass the time while you’re squeezed for bandwidth, the official Wikipedia apps for iOS and Android let you save articles for offline access.
Life can take its toll, that much is certain, but the same technology contributing to the stress of modern day living—namely the web and the smartphone—can also provide some sweet relief when required.
Right now you can download and install a leaked version of Microsoft’s Cortana voice assistant for Android. Suffice it to say, I am whelmed.
When you snooze an email in Google’s Inbox app, it will now work out the best time to remind you about it, such as remindimg you of a restaurant booking an hour in advance, or about your flight the day before.
It's time for your weekly dose of mobile apps again, and this week we have Halo Channel, Streaks, Core Music Player, and many more.
The dating app's new verified-celeb blue-tick is probably more handy in Los Angeles than Leicester.
The free app can turn the screen off when aligned to a number of actions, like placing a phone on a table.
So what apps do we have in sore for the first full week of July? We have Browsy, Inputting+, Flick, and many more.
It's time for another batch of mobile madness, and this week we have a lovely selection of new apps including the likes of IF by IFTTT, Timeline Trip London, and bizview.
The Confederate flag is a garbage flag that represents garbage ideas. But in an effort to purge the world of those garbage ideas, some companies are too quick to pull out the banhammer.
As we enter July, let's take a look at the apps you should have installed on your phone in the coming month. We've got Office Lens, Portal from Pushbullet, and BitTorrent Shoot.
The extra display can be used for all sorts of different things, and thanks to a clever app you can get one of them on your standard flat-screen Android device.
Microsoft Office for Android came out for tablets in January, but the app suite is available for Android smartphones starting today.
It is now officially slightly more unterrible.
Today is a fabulous day, because Adobe has reset the clock for free trials on all of its Creative Cloud apps.