Домой United States USA — IT Just got an iPhone for Christmas? Download these apps!

Just got an iPhone for Christmas? Download these apps!

298
0
ПОДЕЛИТЬСЯ

Ready, steady, woah! You’ve unwrapped your shiny new iPhone, signed in with your Apple ID and you’re ready to rock — but what exciting apps should you ask Silicon Santa to leave under your tech tree this Christmas? Don’t worry, we’re done with the festive puns. These are the must-have apps you should download on your new iPhone SE, 6S, 7,7 Plus, 8,8 Plus
Ready, steady, woah!
You’ve unwrapped your shiny new iPhone, signed in with your Apple ID and you’re ready to rock — but what exciting apps should you ask Silicon Santa to leave under your tech tree this Christmas?
Don’t worry, we’re done with the festive puns. These are the must-have apps you should download on your new iPhone SE, 6S, 7,7 Plus, 8,8 Plus or iPhone X.
If you like eBooks you need the Kindle app: it syncs automatically between iPhone and other devices so you’re always at the right place, it boasts a huge library of content and the recent revamp has made it even nicer to spend time in. The iPhone’s Night Shift mode means reading in bed shouldn’t keep you up all night either.
The iPhone’s weather app is good, but if you’d rather have one that’s evil then Carrot is the weather app for you: it tells you the weather in a cheerfully abusive manner, and you can fine tune the abuse to match your political views or tolerance for foul language. There’s a fun AR feature, endless customization options and an excellent Apple Watch app and complication too. Download it now, meatbags!
If you haven’t been tempted by a paid-for iCloud subscription, there are several options for storing your shots in the cloud such as Flickr and Google Photos. Flickr’s recent history doesn’t make us too confident in its long-term future, but you can be pretty sure Google will still be around long after Earth has become a post-apocalyptic wasteland. You’re getting free storage for all your pictures while helping to train Google’s face and object recognition systems for the coming war on humans.
Here’s another app that’s much better than Apple’s one: Fantastical 2, which offers natural language input, effortless contact of invitees, geo-fenced reminders, snooze alerts and support for Google Maps and 1Password. It works happily with iCloud, Google Calendar, Yahoo and Exchange, its Today widget tells you everything you need to know without unlocking your phone, you can share events from apps such as Safari and we’d be genuinely lost without it.
Apple’s own Messages app is really good, but it’s Apple-only and most of us have pals using other devices too. Enter WhatsApp, the world’s favorite chat app: provided you’re on Wi-Fi or have a generous mobile data allowance you can send messages and media to anywhere in the world with the convenience of SMS and the cost of a thing that doesn’t cost anything.
The Maps app in iOS has got a lot smarter recently and can tell you what bus to catch from where (as can Google Maps), but when it comes to mastering public transport in the world’s biggest cities CityMapper is the app you need. It combines multiple feeds from different public transit agencies to work out the most efficient route, compares the cost with Uber and even tells you the best bit of the platform to stand at while you wait.
The mobile web is often an awful place, with pages hiding behind endless ads while sites track you all around the internet. Better Blocker plugs into your mobile Safari to banish the blockers, protect your privacy and eliminate user-unfriendly advertising. Rather than a block-everything approach it tries to enforce what it calls Ethical Design, and you can unblock sites you want to support. Ad-funded websites deserve to make a living, but they don’t deserve to invade your privacy.
Before you sign up for Apple Music, check out Spotify first: not only is it a superb music streaming service with excellent high-quality options for paying subscribers, but it also works brilliantly with multiple devices: we can start a song on our phone and then play it on our Android TV, pick up where we left off with the Echo in the kitchen and control everything with Siri or Alexa. Brilliant.
Apple has a tendency to add features you’ve seen elsewhere, so Safari’s save-for-later reading list feature has echoes of similar apps such as Instapaper and Pocket. But Pocket remains a useful app in its own right: it’s multi-platform, has a great layout, integrates with your browser and your favorite social media apps and identifies things you’re likely to be interested in. If you’re still emailing interesting things to yourself, get Pocket instead.
Google’s fast, free and, er, filter-y photo editor can transform your images in ways the default Photos app can only imagine. There’s lots of fun stuff in Snapseed, and plenty for the pros too, including curves and RAW editing. It’s a particularly good companion for the Plus iPhones and the iPhone X, whose cameras already take superlative shots. That plus Snapseed can make magic.
You may already know the wonderful VLC as one of the very best video apps for Mac or PC, a Swiss Army Knife that can play formats we haven’t even heard of and do all kinds of cool things to them. The iOS version of VLC is just as wonderful. The main draw is its ability to play media without first having to convert it, but it also streams from everything and works with all the major file sharing platforms.
Steve Jobs famously told the creators of Dropbox that their service was a feature that could easily be duplicated, but while iCloud Drive does a reasonable job of storage it doesn’t have the super-fast cross-platform, cross-device file syncing Dropbox offers. The free storage isn’t as generous as some rivals but the sharing is effortless and the iOS app makes it easy to keep on top of the things that matter. There’s automatic photo uploading if you want it too.
When the tweeting gets tough, the tough turn to Tweetbot. Unlike the official Twitter app, which is a wretched hive of villainy, Tweetbot is a civilizing influence. You can mute by user, hashtag, source or keywords; sync between iOS and Mac; see who’s liking and retweeting you; and basically do Twitter like a boss. Leaving Tweetbot for lesser apps is rather like taking a shovel and bashing yourself repeatedly in the face with it, and not in a good way.
Get the garlic and the wooden crosses out: we’re recommending a Microsoft app! And we’re doing so because OneNote is really, really good. It works best if you’re also using it on other devices — it’s built around syncing — but it’s a perfectly great stand-alone notes app too, and it really benefits from the larger screens of the iPhones Plus and X.

Continue reading...