February's Essential Apps for Android, iOS, and Windows Phone
From Astropad to Pushbullet, this month has had some some mean mobile machines you may have missed. Time to fix that.
From Astropad to Pushbullet, this month has had some some mean mobile machines you may have missed. Time to fix that.
Google has splashed out a massive £16m on the exclusive rights to the .app domain suffix. Now required: idea of what to do with them.
Fancy yourself as a future Brit Award winner, minus the capes and pratfalls?
We're not talking food here: IFTTT's new apps bring one-tap magic to your phone (or smartwatch) and can be used to quickly push out photos, trigger actions and create notes.
"Yeah, just at me the money. At me. You know, on Twitter. The at symbol. The swirly little a thing. Above the apostrophe. Never mind, just keep it."
And now at least two of them will have to stop claiming that they can.
Noted Kanye West enthusiast Kanye West is many things. Today, that thing is grieving game developer.
New update seemingly remedies years of racial diversity lacking in iPhone-messaging emoji-selection.
Bar workers have a front-row seat for awkward first encounters — and they're definitely talking about it.
Along with our usual look at the latest apps for iOS, Android, and Windows Phone, this week our round-up comes with added relevance to BlackBerry users! Huzzah!
Download the app onto a Mac and iPad, and the computer screen will be mirrored wirelessly onto the tablet.
Do you use Microsoft's Office apps on iOS devices? Word, Excel and Powerpoint now come complete with iCloud integration on iPhone and iPad. [Microsoft (App Store)]
You don't have to tip with many app-based cab booking services. But does that mean you shouldn't?
Initially a beta feature, now everyone can load up their e-ink watches with Google's wares.
Forget the Boomtown Rats, we love Monday's at Giz UK – made better with this week's list of the best apps for iPhone, iPad, Android, and Windows Phone.
For the past ten days, I've been getting my news from Snapchat. I've learned what old media thinks app media really wants. And it's not pretty.