Tag: free app

10 Apps That Boost Productivity

Think apps are all about playing games and killing time? Here are 10 apps that can actually be used in ways that may help save time over the course of the day. For businesses both large and small, as well as individuals who want to get stuff done, here are 10 apps that can help to boost productivity.

SugarSync

This app is a lot like DropBox, only better. Not only can you view files like on DropBox, but you can also perform standard operations. The app also allows you to synchronize the folders on your computer selectively. Finally, it’s an automatic function, so it runs without you noticing, helping you increase your productivity.

Buffer

This app is perfect for anyone who runs the social media accounts for his or her company. Buffer allows you to schedule tweets and other messages over the course of the day, so you can take care of all that at one time and not have to keep remembering to create posts, which can save time and make your job much easier. You are also able to access analytics for every post you create on Twitter, Facebook, and other social media sites, so you know which ones are having the desired effect.

Basecamp

This app helps you keep track of everything you need to know, from to-do lists to important files to discussions that you need to reference later, and everything in between. You can also have multiple users on the same account, so if you’re working on a group project, Basecamp can help make things flow a lot quicker.

mobile apps

Wunderlist

This app is simple but effective when it comes to putting lists together. Aside from being free, which is also nice, Wunderlist allows you to create as many lists as you need and access them throughout all of your devices, so you never have to waste time trying to track something down. You can also share those lists with other people, making it another convenient app to use for group projects.

Speek

When it comes to conference calls, this app makes everything run much faster and smoother. Instead of phone numbers, the app allows you to send a personal link to those invited to the conference call. When they want to join, they simply click the link on any of their devices. Conference calls don’t get much easier than that, making Speek essential for any business that has frequent conference calls.

Shoeboxed

This free app is perfect for keeping track of receipts, either personal or business. Whenever you get a receipt, simply scan it using your phone and the app will organize it alongside all your other receipts. Shoeboxed can then generate an expense report for you based on all your receipts, saving you a lot of hassle.

Sunrise

This is a calendar app that’s sleek and attractive compared to similar apps. Sunrise not only helps you keep track of your appointments, but it also gives you the weather forecast at the time of each appointment. It also utilizes Google Maps to give you directions to your appointment just in case you need it.

Inkflow

This app is essential for anyone who works in a creative field. When words aren’t enough, this app lets you sketch out your ideas, doing so in color. When you’re done, it’s easy to export whatever you’ve done in a PDF or JPEG, so you’re never straining to remember the brilliant idea you had earlier in the day.

CoBook

This app acts as an address book, but a better address book than the one on your phone. CoBook will update your contact list with pictures and phone numbers. It also lets you view their latest tweet of everyone listed, so it’s easier to keep track of people and see what they’re up to.

Cold Turkey

If this app doesn’t improve your productivity, then you are officially hopeless. Cold Turkey allows you to block those addicting but time-wasting sites during specific parts of the date. This means that throwing away 10 minutes checking Facebook and Twitter in the middle of the workday can now be prevented. What a novel idea, right? With this app, you will waste far less time and be far more productive.

Author: Floyd Davis of nostop.net

 

QR codes at the Yamba Museum bring history to the present

A free app in combination with the quick response codes are all that visitors need on their smartphones.

The Yamba Museum may be focusing on the past, but it is doing so with 21st century technology, with the development of QR codes as well as a free app that can be used on mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets that are frequently carried by visitors to the location.

The application allows the quick response codes to be scanned in order to enhance their experience.

All that a visitor must do in order to take advantage of the additional mobile features at Yamba, is to download a free app and scan the special QR codes. This allows them to be able to take a tour of the museum that involves access to additional images and interesting pieces of historical information that apply to what they are actually seeing in front of them in reality.

The QR codes have been printed onto stickers and free postcards that have been distributed around the area.

QR Codes at a MuseumNearby shops and holiday accommodation sites displayed and shared the stickers and postcards that were available to visitors in Yamba for free. The alternative to scanning the barcodes was to visit the museum’s official website where the entire tour could be downloaded so that it could be accessed once the visitor headed out to the Yamba Museum.

The downloadable tour is broken down into six different parts so that the visitor can access them as needed or wanted. They consist of the Pilot Station, the Bay, the Flat, the Hill, the River Training Works, and the Museum. The design of the parts of the tour are all meant to be compatible with a mobile device and are easy to view and read while the gadget’s user is taking the Yamba tour.

Beyond smartphones and tablets, the app can be downloaded into desktops, laptops, notebook computers, and any other device with a platform that supports a standard HTML browser. It was developed by Jon Henry, a Port of Yamba Historical Society member, based on the information that was provided by John McNamara, a research officer. It also used some of the museum’s own historical photographs from its collection. Henry will be updating the History Tour application on a regular basis. The QR codes were created by the society’s member, Rob Knight.