Sunday, January 27, 2013

How to Find Best iPhone Apps


I noticed an article earlier today about iPhone apps that said that there would be as many as three hundred thousand apps at the store by November 2010. How many of these apps could be of use to anyone? How do you wade through the vast quantity of apps to find those few apps that will help you make your day go easier for business and personal use? You can go to several sites that offer reviews on iPhone apps that will give you the iPhone apps best suited for the application you want.
At appstoresapps.com you can look at a variety of categories of apps for just about anything you can think of. There are featured apps (I can not determine what makes them featured unless they merely paid for the privilege of appearing at the top of the page) along with links for free apps and paid apps and iPhone apps reviews. There is even a section on tips for iPhone users to maximize the capabilities of their device.
If you click on the "Most Popular Apps" link you are taken to a page with many links that begin with "Top 50...". Some of these categories include Top 50 Free Game Apps, Top 50 Free Entertainment Apps, Top 50 Free Lifestyle Apps, Top 50 Free Utility Apps and many more categories. These categories are mirrored with the Top 50 Paid Game Apps, Top 50 Paid Entertainment Apps and so on.
For business people you can go through the Top 50 Free Utility Apps that start with an interesting app called Touch Scale - JaJa and Company. Touch Scale supposedly turns your device into a scale that can weigh small items like jewelry, coins, etc. These apps are ranked by iTunes statistics so since this was listed first it should be the most popular (downloaded) app. After reading the reviews I do not understand why this app could be rated #1 overall. As a whole the reviewers said the app was horrible and did not actually weight anything.
The second app listed in the Utilities section is AT&T Mark the Spot. This app allows users to give notice to AT&T when there is a service issue with their device and gives the user the opportunity to instantly give AT&T customer service the exact location where the problem occurred along with more detailed info on whether the problem occurred a single time or repeatedly in the same area. This seems to be a much more useful app than the scale and most reviewers felt the same way.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/3427663

No comments:

Post a Comment