These days,
organizing isn’t as tedious as it was before. With your phone’s app store
filled with really intelligent apps, structuring your daily schedule is just a
piece of cake.The best part of these platforms is that you don’t have to worry
about teaching them, they will learn with your habits and preferences.
Google
replaced their boring Mail some time back with Inbox, a beautiful mail
organizing service. I’m a huge fan of Inbox, it is available for Android, iOS
and the web – all of which are decorated with material designs.
Inbox is
basically a Mail app but with some smart add-ons. The app sort your emails in
different bundles including promotions, purchases and a lot more. You can see
these mails on main page but they won’t come in your way. Purchases and Trips
have their own unique views, you will be seeing images of your purchases and
your trips details without you opening the particular message. The best part is
that you can create your own and group your mails.
There are
other three important aspects of this app – Pin, Snooze and Done.
When you pin
an email, it gets a special treatment and that conversation always stays on
top, you can even filter your inbox with only pinned mails with just a simple
switch. Imagine a scenario when you don’t have to read an important email, you
can snooze that and the app will remind you to read that. Marking done
basically means what it sounds like, you’re done with the mail and hence won’t
show up in your default view.
Inbox by Google solves any
inbox nightmares you ever had. Using it is a pleasure and with quick swipes,
you can neatly clean up your inbox. I especially love the Pin and Trips
feature, it’s just an awesome way to work when you don’t keep missing important
mails.
There’s a lot
to explore here, so go ahead and give it a whirl if you haven’t yet!
2. Save Links with Pocket
Pocket is a neat little bookmarking app that saves articles/videos
you don’t have time to read, it’s the most well known read-it-later service with more than 10 Million
users. Pocket syncs between all your devices and you can read articles offline,
of course it will download them first.
Sharing on
pocket is really effortless, just share using the default sharing options or
using extensions your computer’s browser.
In a recent
update, the app also shows some of the pages its users are reading so that you
can download them for later. It integrates with over 1500 apps making it an
absolute delight to use. The app is free; a premium version costs $44.99 a year
and gives you a permanent library of all articles and pages you save, so they
remain accessible even if the original page changes.
Pocket is a
clean, everyday utility you will love, so give it a shot and stop emailing the
links to yourself.
3. Get on with Trello and start
collaborating
Chances are
you’re not an individual, you’re a part of an organization that works together
and splits tasks. But checking on everyone and assigning tasks can get a bit
complicated. Trello is there exactly to resolve that.
Trello describes itself as a “collaboration tool that organizes your projects into boards”
but getting how solid this platform is will take you some time.
With Trello,
you can create groups, checklists, assign an item in that list to different
members, you can even add due dates on those and a lot more. The whole service
revolves around the “board”, the home of your project where all cards are
showcased. There are timelines for individual works showing when a person
completed a task or comments made by members.
Trello isn’t
just limited to your workplace, it can be really beneficial for personal stuffs
too. For instance arranging a party with someone or trip plannings where you
can assign tasks like who will arrange the car, book the hotel etc. You get the
idea.
Of course if you need something simple, basic To-Do apps will do the job.
There’s a lot
more to Trello than the things we have mentioned above, it is available for
your mobile and free to use too. So get on with Trello and start collaborating.
4. Capture documents with Office Lens
Microsoft’s
Office Lens simplifies your document photos by cleverly recognizing what you’re
trying to scan and what’s the size of that document.
Office lens
doesn’t always get what you’re scanning but you can tell the app manually that
including whiteboards, business cards or plain old documents. Users can save
documents scanned with Office Lens in a variety of formats, including as a Word
document, as a JPEG or upload it somewhere on the cloud.
The biggest
advantage this app has is the ability to render your shot into an appropriate
image that can be easily used for professional purposes. No matter at what
angle or distance you take the shot, chances are office lens will get it right.
Office Lens is an impressive, simple app and it doesn’t cost a
cent. Try it now! Available on Windows, Android and iOS.
5. Say goodbye to spam messages
with TrueMessenger
Truecaller launched the True Messenger app last year that aims to eliminate spam messages from your life.
The app blocks messages from spammers, you can also mark a particular thread as
spam if it isn’t already in the company’s database.
The concept
is similar to their flagship (caller database) app but this time it adds a
protective layer to your messaging inbox. Everything else with this app works
like any other SMS applications, the app also bundles a widget to quickly
glance your messages.
TrueMessenger
for me right now works almost everytime, whenever it doesn’t, I just manually
hit the block button. Right now this service is limited to Android as there’s
no option to change the default SMS apps on iOS.
So those were
some of the best apps that exist to simplify your life, start using them and
organize your life. Tell us your favorites down below in the comments section!
No comments:
Post a Comment