Hello All, 

I thought I would post the following article as a point of interest but
please note that I am, in no way, endorsing or speaking to the VoiceOver
accessibility of any of them.  

In fact, in some instances, I flatly disagree with the author.

Mark

13 apps for your iPhone that are better than the ones Apple made

By Dave Smith
Business Insider 


Every iPhone comes with a slew of Apple's own first-party apps. 

Thankfully, though, the App Store is overflowing with alternative apps, many
of which are better than Apple's. 

Whether you're looking to organize your photos, get work done, or get around
town, we've scoured the App Store for the best apps that are better than the
default ones on your iPhone. 

Instead of Mail, use Edison Email.
I try new email apps all the time, but after using Outlook for a while, I've
fallen in love with another app, Edison Email. 
It's incredibly fast, highly customizable, and, most importantly, it's both
smarter and more proactive than any other email app I've used. It
automatically scans your emails for purchases, receipts, attachments,
calendar dates, and more, and it'll automatically put those emails into
separate, appropriately labeled folders that appear on your sidebar. It's
super nifty - you can  read my review of it here. 
(Edison Email,  free) 

Instead of Calendar, use Google Calendar.
I've used Google's calendar app on the desktop for years - but even if you
haven't, you'll feel right at home on Google Calendar, which is beautiful to
look at and easy to use. 
Like Apple's Calendar, it can pull in data from Google, Facebook, and
iCloud, but it presents all the information in a much more useful way than
Apple's default app does. The top half of the screen shows you the whole
month, and the lower half of the screen shows you what's up next. You can
scroll down to see what's coming up, and you can tap the top right corner of
the screen to jump back to the present day. It's all incredibly intuitive. 
(Google Calendar,  free) 

Instead of Notes, use Evernote.
Apple's Notes for iOS has gotten better in recent years, but Evernote is
still the best way to create different types of notes and keep them
organized across all your devices. 
With Evernote, you can create notes out from photos or text, flag notes to
revisit later, set reminders for yourself, and tag your notes in various
ways to stay organized. Better yet, if you take pictures of documents and
upload them to Evernote, its powerful search function can even scan those
PDFs and other documents. And, of course, Evernote syncs across all devices
- phones, tablets, laptops, and desktops. 
(Evernote, free) 

Instead of Maps, use Google Maps.
Apple's mapping and navigation app has gotten much better since its debut in
2012, but Google Maps is still the most reliable, most detailed,
easiest-to-use mapping and navigation app for travel, whether you're
walking, driving, biking, taking a bus, taking a train, or hailing a car. 
Google says its Maps data is crowdsourced from "oodles of Android phones
moving through the world" and processed by machine learning algorithms that
study traffic patterns to give you the quickest route every time. 
(Google Maps, free) 

Instead of Voice Memos, use Recordium.
Apple's Voice Memos app is nice, but it doesn't give you a great way to
organize or annotate all your recordings. Enter Recordium, which lets you
edit your clips right in the app and annotate any part of the recording. It
will even sync with your favorite cloud storage service like Google Drive or
Dropbox. 
(Recordium Pro,  $9.99) 

Instead of Apple Music, use Spotify.
Apple Music is Apple's built-in music streaming service - you can still load
it up with music from your iTunes library for free, but if you pay $10 a
month, you'll get access to Apple's entire music catalog. Spotify, however,
is still the most polished music app out there, and in my opinion the best
experience that's actually worth your money. 
Spotify Premium costs about the same per month as Apple Music, but Spotify
organizes music into clever ways that Apple does not. Aside from browsing by
genre or what's topping the charts, Spotify also puts together a unique
"Discover Weekly" playlist for you every Monday based on your listening
habits and a "Release Radar" playlist every Friday of new music you might
like. It's not easy to find new music, but through smart curation and
design, Spotify does music discoverability better than anyone else in the
game. 
(Spotify, free) 

Instead of Weather, use Dark Sky.
Apple's Weather works fine most of the time - it's taking the same
information as The Weather Channel, specifically its Weather Underground
service - but the most detailed and accurate weather app I've used is Dark
Sky. You can get minute-to-minute predictions for the next hour, and
hour-by-hour forecasts for the next day and week. 
Since Dark Sky tracks your location via GPS, you can get notifications for
when it's about to start raining or snowing in your area - it's eerily good
at this - and you can even watch radar animations to see how storms are
moving. 
(Dark Sky,  $3.99) 

Instead of Safari, use Google Chrome.
Google Chrome offers most of the same features as Safari, but if you use
Chrome on your laptop or desktop, the mobile version will sync all your tabs
and information so you can have a seamless experience across all your
devices. 
(Google Chrome,  free) 

Instead of Pages, use Word.
Apple's Pages has plenty of useful tools, but it's not always easy to read
or format on the smaller iPhone screen. In bringing Word to the iPhone,
Microsoft made sure it had built-in modes for easy reading versus the real
document layout, and it's very easy to write and format your documents with
text, photos, and equations - and have it all look good on other devices -
seamlessly. 
(Microsoft Word,  free) 

Instead of Health, use MyFitnessPal.
Apple's Health more or less collects data from other apps, but it assumes
you use a ton of other fitness-tracking devices that can count steps and
stairs by themselves. MyFitnessPal, on the other hand, offers much more in
the way of tracking your own fitness. It's easy to track your diet using its
immense database of foods - you can even scan barcodes - and it also works
with over 60 fitness-tracking devices and apps to give you a picture of your
overall health. You can see your progress at a glance and add notes to your
"diary" for future reference. 
In general, it's just a much more complete app - you can even share your
progress to your favorite social network in case you need cheering on. 
(MyFitnessPal,  free) 

Instead of iMovie, use Videoshop.
Videoshop makes it exceedingly simple to cut and combine your iPhone videos
into one movie - you can also add filters, music, and animated titles, and
even apply slo-mo or fast-motion to your videos to get the desired effect.
Once you're done, sharing to your favorite social network is as easy as a
button tap. 
(Videoshop,  $1.99) 

Instead of Keynote, use PowerPoint.
Keynote offers a basic slideshow creator and editor with plenty of
transition animations and formatting options, but it doesn't hold a candle
to PowerPoint. Microsoft's app lets you create slideshows that sync across
all devices, but it also lets you view your notes as your presentation is
beamed to a bigger screen. You can even draw all over your presentation
right from your iPhone in real time. 
(Microsoft PowerPoint,  free) 

Instead of Numbers, use Microsoft Excel.
Apple's Numbers is helpful for creating charts, but Excel is still the best
spreadsheet application out there - and it will sync across all your
devices. The iPhone app even has a special formula keyboard that lets you
compute more quickly and is much easier than working with a standard
keyboard. 
(Microsoft Excel,  free) 

Original Article at:
http://www.businessinsider.com/iphone-apps-better-than-apple-2017-1


-- 
The following information is important for all members of the Mac Visionaries 
list.

If you have any questions or concerns about the running of this list, or if you 
feel that a member's post is inappropriate, please contact the owners or 
moderators directly rather than posting on the list itself.

Your Mac Visionaries list moderator is Mark Taylor.  You can reach mark at:  
mk...@ucla.edu and your owner is Cara Quinn - you can reach Cara at 
caraqu...@caraquinn.com

The archives for this list can be searched at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/macvisionaries@googlegroups.com/
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"MacVisionaries" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to