Our Favourite Android, IOS, And Windows Phone Apps Of The Week

Our Favourite Android, IOS, And Windows Phone Apps Of The Week

Welcome to 2015 and the first Apps of the Week for the new year! Last year was filled with amazing apps that only made our smartphones better, so let’s start this year off right.

The holiday saw a bit of a downtick in the world of apps (developers have families too!), but there were still some solid additions to every major app store. Here are the best of them.


Multi-platform

Hotel My Phone

Now here’s an interesting idea. We’ve all been out with friends only to realise that our smartphone is on life support. As the last percentages of battery drain away into nothingness, you must now float around untethered from our device. With Hotel My Phone, you can borrow a friend’s phone, sign in, and send and receive texts and phone calls with your phone number. Just don’t hog your friend’s phone all night. That ain’t cool. [Free for iOS and Android]


FlashChat

At first I didn’t really understand the appeal of FlashChat. So I can talk to everyone on the same wifi? Who cares? But I wan’t thinking big enough. When you think of sprawling wifi on college campuses or at massive businesses, FlashChat becomes handy for easy communication among friends and coworkers. It’s also anonymous and as soon as you leave the wifi range, you’re immediately signed out and your conversation is scrubbed. [Free for iOS and Android]

Android

Shou.TV

Shou.TV is a fun one. Like a hyper-focused Twitch for mobile games, this app lets you live broadcast your screen or simply record your screen as separate files you can use later. There’s also a discovery function to jump into watching popular mobile games like Clash of Clans or Minecraft. Right now, the app works wonders with Android Lollipop, but you’ll need a rooted device if you’re running anything else. The app is also available for iPhone, jailbroken that is. [Free]

SnoopSnitch

SnoopSnitch is a really interesting idea born out of the recent Chaos Computer Congress in Hamburg, Germany. The app uses radio signals to sniff out any devices that might be snooping. It’s main targets are “stingrays,” gadgets that fool phones into connecting with them. SnoopSnitch detects if your data is at risk. Don’t let the ratings on this one fool you. SnoopSnitch just has very specific requirements in order to work, a Qualcomm chipset, root access, and Android 4.1 or higher being chief among them. Be sure to pay close attention if you’re going to give it a look. [Free]


iOS

Reuk

iOS 8 brought us third-party manual access to our iPhone’s camera. But how you package all those new tools into a UI that makes sense has been the primary challenge for developers. No doubt some great options already exist, but Reuk takes advanced level photography controls and boils them down into a super clean and straightforward interface. [$1.29]


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