The best Android apps for 2017
At Tech Advisor we review a *lot* of phones and tablets, but certain apps are always top of our list. Here's our pick of the best Android apps - the most useful downloads if you've just bought a new Android phone or tablet.
Your phone is capable of many things, but at its
heart it is a phone, and designed for keeping in touch with friends,
family, colleagues and whoever else you fancy a chin wag with.
Your phone will have a messaging app and a dialler
built-in. What it may not have is online messenger and calling
services that allow you to contact friends over an internet- rather
than cellular connection.
Two of our all-time favourites are WhatsApp
Messenger and Skype. WhatsApp is free for all users, and lets you
send and receive free messages, pictures, videos and voice messages
over the web. If you have a tablet, laptop or PC you should also
check out WhatsApp Web for synching messages between the two.
Also see: How to install WhatsApp on a tablet.
Skype, meanwhile, is the video chat service for
people who don't have iPhones and iPads and therefore can't use
FaceTime. It's an excellent way of speaking face-to-face with people
who are too far away to visit.
If you're not fussy who it is you're chatting to,
and you're a fan of online forums, you'll also be pleased to learn
Reddit has recently launched its full Android app.
What is Reddit, though? "There’s a Reddit
community for every subject imaginable: your favourite sports team,
relationship advice, memes, silly gifs, the latest in news and
politics - all in real time," states the official download page,
and we couldn't say it better ourselves. It's free - go get it.
Many Android
phones and tablets come with social-media apps built-in, but if yours
doesn't then top of your list will be Facebook and Twitter.
If you're downloading Facebook don't forget
Facebook Messenger for private messaging with friends (no, it's not
evil), and if you're a poster rather than a lurker then Timehop
offers a fascinating look back at what was on your mind on this day
in previous years.
If social is your bag, there are loads more free
apps with which you can stalk your friends and make them jealous with
a picture of what you just ate for dinner or news on your latest job.
Snapchat is the latest trending social app, and
face-swapping is all the rage (beginners should check out our guide
on How to use Snapchat), while LinkedIn, Instagram and Pinterest are
just a handful of other social apps
that are available. You can also find all manner of social
aggregators that combine all your social feeds into a single feed.
At Tech Advisor we're using Slack for instant
messaging between colleagues. It's much easier to follow than a long
email thread where various people reply to different messages all at
once, and some of my team mates are particularly enjoying its GIF
support.
Large, high-resolution screens are all the rage
with today's new Android phones, which paired with their fast
processors and graphics makes them ideal devices on which to watch
TV, video and films.
YouTube is more than likely preinstalled on your
Android
device - and if it's not you should download it now. Some
other free apps that we wouldn't be without include TVCatchUp, which
rather than a catch-up TV service actually offers live-streaming of
UK Freeview channels, plus some actual TV catch-up services such as
BBC iPlayer (you'll also need BBC Media Player), ITV Hub, All 4 and
Demand 5.
If you subscribe to Sky at home then Sky Go lets
you watch Sky TV on your phone or tablet, while Virgin offers a
similar deal with Virgin TV Anywhere.
Netflix and Amazon Prime Instant Video are the two
big online film-streaming services, each charging a monthly
subscription of around £7 and letting you watch as many films as you
like within that period. We like Netflix, although you may prefer the
associated benefits of having a Prime account, including free
next-day delivery on eligible items bought on Amazon and Amazon Prime
Music. We've compared your options to help you choose.
We're also big fans of NowTV which, like Prime and
Netflix, is a subscription service that puts hundreds of TV box sets
and catch-up TV from some of Sky's most popular channels at your
fingertips. NowTV also has a movies option that lets you tune into a
great many of the films broadcast over Sky's movie channels.
Film fans will more than likely appreciate IMDB,
the world's largest collection of movie, TV and celebrity info, while
for TV sport fanatics there's BBC Sport and Sky Sports.
If you have an Android phone or tablet, you can
access your entire audio collection by uploading it to Google Play
Music, which is more than likely preinstalled on your device. But
what about new stuff?
In the past if you wanted to listen to new music
and you didn't want to pay for it you would listen to the radio. Many
Android phones and tablets have a built-in FM radio, and you simply
plug in a pair of headphones to act as the aerial. There are also
online radio services - one of our favourites is BBC iPlayer Radio.
But this is the 21st century, and while radio
still thrives online music streaming is where it's at, allowing you
to listen to what you want, when you want, and if you want to ditch
the ads that's possible too. Spotify and Deezer are two of the most
popular online music-streaming services, but even Google has its own
subscription-based Music service. Weigh up your options in our best
music-streaming service article.
Audio fans will also like SoundCloud, to help them
find new music, and Shazam, to work out what it was they just
listened to.
Big screens don't just make for easier watching,
they make for easier reading too. Whether you want to read books or
magazines, there's an app for that.
We'll start with magazines since we are, after
all, a publishing company. One of our favourite new services is
Readly, which is a subscription-based magazine service that lets you
read as many mags as you want for a one-off fee. Tech Advisor and its
sister titles Macworld, iPad & iPhone User, Android
Advisor and Windows Advisor are all available on Readly, and there's
loads more good stuff too. Check it out with a free trial.
And now books. No matter what other pies it has
fingers in, Amazon is still the company we associate with buying
books, whether you want them in paperback or digital form. You don't
need one of Amazon's own Kindle tablets or e-readers to enjoy its
unique reading experience, since the Amazon Kindle app is available
for all Android
phones and tablets. In fact, all the apps in Amazon's app store are
available for your Android device - see how to get truly free Amazon
apps for your phone or tablet.
Smartphone cameras are getting better than ever,
and even out of the box they take some fantastic snaps (also see:
What's the best phone camera 2017). But there are apps that make a
good thing great.
We asked around the Tech Advisor office, and there
was one clear favourite: Snapseed. It offers professional controls
that are applied with a fingertip. Easy peasy.
Photography fans shouldn't forget Instagram
either. Beginners should check out our guide on How to use Instagram.
If you are taking photos and video on your Android
phone or tablet, make sure you have Google Photos installed and
configured. Photos will automatically back up your snaps and video
clips over a Wi-Fi connection, meaning they are not only safe if you
lose or break your device, but also accessible from any other
computer on which you are signed into your Google account. Also see:
How to back up Android.
Our phones and tablets are not just like mini PCs,
they are mini PCs. And with online productivity services and cloud
storage you get the benefit of being able to access all your office
documents from wherever you are, and collaborate on them with
colleagues.
At Tech Advisor we use Google Apps for Work, so by
default we tend to use Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Drive, Google
Docs and Google Sheets for work tasks both in and out the office. But
there are plenty of other app choices, and not least is Microsoft's
Office suite, with free Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote apps for
Android phones and tablets. With OneDrive you also get useful cloud
storage, or you might prefer Dropbox or Box - see our round-up of the
best cloud-storage services.
AirDroid is a great app for wirelessly managing
your Android phone or tablet from any PC or Mac, too.
One app that's specific to us as a tech media
publisher, but also useful for anyone whose business involves a
website, is Google Analytics. Using the Analytics Android app on my
smartphone I can see not only how many people are reading this very
article right now, but I can see what drove them to the article, on
what type of device they're browsing and other useful stats.
We've already rounded up some of the best Android
games in our separate round-up, but we can't ignore them entirely in
this article for the simple fact that having at least one good game
on your phone or tablet is essential for those times you can't get
online and need something to do to fill five minutes. And even people
who *don't play games* will be sucked in when their competitiveness
gets the better of them. And it will get the better of them.
We've already rounded up some of the best Android
games in our separate round-up, but we can't ignore them entirely in
this article for the simple fact that having at least one good game
on your phone or tablet is essential for those times you can't get
online and need something to do to fill five minutes. And even people
who *don't play games* will be sucked in when their competitiveness
gets the better of them. And it will get the better of them.
The internet and a wealth of information is at
your fingertips, but apps take away the hassle of searching for it.
You can have news and weather information delivered directly to your
phone simply by launching an app.
Here in the UK two that really stand out are BBC
News and BBC Weather. But you can install as many as you like - don't
fancy that rain and wind the BBC says is coming your way? Perhaps the
Met Office is predicting bright sunshine and BBQ weather.
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