Lifehacker Pack for iPhone: Our List of the Best iPhone Apps
Looking to power up your iPhone with the best free and cheap apps out
there? Our second edition of the Lifehacker Pack for iPhone rounds up
our favorite must-have iPhone applications.
The Lifehacker Pack is a yearly snapshot of our favorite, must-have applications for each of our favorite platforms. If you're curious to see how things have changed this year, here's last year's Lifehacker Pack for iPhone.
Looking for an app in a specific category? Use the links below to jump around.
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Download Instapaper or ReadItLater Free / ReadItLater Pro
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Facebook
The official Facebook app on the iPhone is great for general updates and messages, but it becomes especially useful when all your contacts flood in. If your address book is missing a number, just find your friend in the Facebook app and click the call button. You can also keep track of events, check your news feed, and edit your profile.
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Jailbreak Your iPhone
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Download StreamToMe or Air Video
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Download iBooks, Kindle, or Stanza
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Instagram
Instagram is a wonderful little social camera app that lets you take pictures, apply neat vintage-style filters, and share your images across the web on various social sites and photo sharing services. It's fast, it's free, and it's pretty addictive.
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If you're looking for more options, or just to see what's changed for 2011, check out last year's Lifehacker Pack for iPhone. Got any other free iPhone apps you find indispensable? Share your picks in the comments.
You can follow Adam Dachis, the author of this post, on Twitter, Google+, and Facebook. Twitter's the best way to contact him, too.
Source: http://lifehacker.com/5827212/lifehacker-pack-for-iphone-our-list-of-the-best-iphone-apps
The Lifehacker Pack is a yearly snapshot of our favorite, must-have applications for each of our favorite platforms. If you're curious to see how things have changed this year, here's last year's Lifehacker Pack for iPhone.
Looking for an app in a specific category? Use the links below to jump around.
- Productivity
- Internet/Communication
- Location-Aware
- Utilities
- Media
- Food and Entertainment
- Art and Photography
Productivity
Simplenote
Simplenote is a key component in the holy grail of ubiquitous text capture, and rightfully so. Simplenote allows for speedy note entry on your iPhone, plus it syncs with the likewise free Simplenote service so your notes are always available wherever you want them.Download Page
TripIt
If you haven't used TripIt to manage your travel itineraries, you've been missing out. We've already discussed its merits, but the free iPhone app makes it even easier to manage your trip. It's a natural extensions of the service, since if you're traveling it's more than likely that you're not at your computer.Download Page
Hipmunk
If you need to book a flight and/or a hotel, Hipmunk provides an agony-free search with lots of great features. You just decide where you want to go and you'll get results organized any way you want. Hipmunk can even tell you if there's Wi-Fi on your flight, plus a whole lot more.Download Page
Instapaper and Read It Later
Instapaper and ReadItLater both serve the purpose of saving web content for later reading, and both offer free and paid versions, but they're still notably different. Instapaper offers you a straightforward and simple way of reading saved content. ReadItLater is a little more feature-rich. Both are great options and you can try ReadItLater for free.Download Instapaper or ReadItLater Free / ReadItLater Pro
Reeder
When it comes to browsing your news feeds, Reeder is the way to go. In addition to a really pleasant, easy-to-use interface it comes with plenty of features to make feed reading better. In addition to Google Reader sync, it provides Readability support so the full text of an article is a lot easier to read. You can also easily share articles and save them to read later in services like Instapaper. Reeder covers all its bases and does its job well.Download Page
Dragon Dictation
Apple's voice recognition handles a few tasks but misses some key features that Dragon Dictation helps to fill in. If typing is not an option, or you're just feeling lazy, Dragon Dictation will type it up for you. You can send a text message or an email directly from the app, and it also integrates with Facebook and Twitter. Although not perfect, Dragon Dictation is surprisingly accurate and will let you correct any mistakes it makes.Download Page
Internet/Communication
Atomic Web
If you've found Mobile Safari to be a bit lacking, you're not alone. Atomic Browser can help, providing true tabbed browsing, private browsing mode, user-agent spoofing, and a ton of features you've come to expect as part of your web-browsing experience.Download Page
Skype
Skype has come a long way since it first hit the iPhone. Initially it was only good for calls over Wi-Fi, but in the past year they've added calling over 3G and video chat. The quality is pretty good for video and audio. While there are plenty of calling alternatives, Skype has become the most solid and versatile option.Download Page
Google Voice
Initially, Google Voice had an on-again-off-again relationship with the iPhone, but now it's here to stay. If you're a member of the service, the app will let you tap into your account to check your voicemail and text messages. Additionally, you can send messages and make calls from your Google Voice number. Because the iPhone is pretty locked down, you can't use Google Voice as your default dialer but it's about as good as you could expect given the restrictions.Download Page
Imo Instant Messanger
Instant messaging on your phone can get a little bit overwhelming, as a touchscreen phone isn't made for rapid text-based communication with many people. Nonetheless, Imo does a really good job at helping you keep up with an influx of text messages. It has a really simple interface that's easy to navigate, support for practically every IM service you could want, keeps a searchable chat history, and a lot more.Download Page
TextFree
If you don't like paying a ridiculous amount of money for small amounts of data, Textfree Unlimited lets you send and receive text messages at no costs. You can even set up a phone number specifically for the app. While Textfree used to only provide free text messages, now the app is free as well. The trade-off is that you get ads, but you have the option to pay to remove them.Download Page
LucyPhone
Another great minute-saver is LucyPhone (check out our quick review), the app that waits on hold so you don't have to. If you're calling a popular business, LucyPhone's directory may even save you the step of going through the phone tree to get to the right department. While you might confuse the customer service representative on the other end, LucyPhone takes all the pain of waiting on hold—including the loss of your mobile minutes.Download Page
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Tweetbot
Tweetbot is an excellent Twitter client. It provides many of the features you'd expect and can get for free with the official Twitter app but with a smarter interface and some added functionality. Tweetbot has its own handy gestures for better navigation, customization options, push notifications with Boxcar (also part of this pack), and a lot more. It might be a little pricey for some at $3, but if you're a Twitter addict you probably won't mind.Download Page
Google+
When Google launched their social network, they knew it would be unwise to do so without great mobile apps for their own Android platform and Apple's. In some ways, thanks to the app's simplified interface, it's easier to use than the Google+ site itself. Getting around is really simple and it provides notifications to keep you up-to-date on all your activity. If you're currently using Google+, it's pretty much a must-have.Download Page
Location-Aware
Maps
While Android's version of Google Maps blows it out of the water, the built-in Maps application on the iPhone is still pretty great. Drivers can check real-time traffic and get simple directions to just about anywhere. Even if you don't drive, walking and public transportation directions are available. With street view integration and a few other neat features, Maps is easily one of the most useful apps on the iPhone.Fuel Finder
If you need gas, Fuel Finder can tell you where to go. All you have to do is choose what's most important to you—distance or cost—and it'll locate several gas stations for you. You can even filter by gas type if your car has specific needs. Once you find what you're looking for, it'll use the built-in Maps application to show you how to get there.Download Page
RunKeeper Free
You have quite a few fitness apps to choose from on the iPhone. One of those happens to be RunKeeper, and lucky us, it has a great free version. RunKeeper uses your iPhone's GPS to track your run and provide you with statistics, giving you the statistical benefits of a treadmill when you're outside the gym. It integrates with your music library and lets you share your activities. While the built-in Nike+ app is also pretty nice, RunKeeper doesn't require the purchase of any additional hardware and lets you choose your brand of shoes.Download Page
Find My iPhone
Even if you're not a MobileMe subscriber, you've probably heard a bit about Find My iPhone in the news. It's already tracked down a few iPhone thieves, but is probably more commonly used when you've just misplaced your phone. It used to cost $99 with MobileMe, but Apple offers it up for free for all iDevices so there's really no reason not to give it a try.Download Page
Utilities
Cydia
While it's not for everyone, jailbreaking your iPhone opens up a world of new possibilities. Cydia is the hub where they reside. Often labeled the jailbreak app store, it allows you to download many more great apps that you can't get through Apple. If you want full control over your phone, you'll want to jailbreak it.Jailbreak Your iPhone
Dropbox
Would it truly be a Lifehacker Pack without file-syncing app extraordinaire Dropbox? While the iPhone version of Dropbox isn't quite as useful as Dropbox on your computer, it makes for a nice companion. If you're using Dropbox for all sorts of clever things, it's always nice having access to your sync'd files from your phone. While the Dropbox app can download anything the iPhone (or a third-party app) can display, you can also save key files on your phone as well.Download Page
BoxCar
If you like frequent push notifications, you'll probably like Boxcar. Boxcar integrates with Twitter, Facebook, email, RSS, and Growl to grab updates of nearly anything you want and push them to your phone. If you want to be alerted the moment something changes, Boxcar will get the job done.Download Page
Media
Panamp
Panamp is an alternative music player for your iPhone that uses a tree-based structure for your content. This makes it really easy to quickly navigate through all your songs and queue them up on the fly. If you like creating playlists on the go, Panamp is the music player you've always wanted. If you like a more traditional structure, however, the built-in iPod app will still do the trick.Download Page
Downcast
If you listen to a lot of podcasts, you should be listening with Downcast. It does just about everything that's missing from Apple's iPod app. For starters, it downloads everything directly from within the app. It'll work over 3G and Wi-Fi, plus you can set rules for when it uses the 3G connection to download and when it doesn't. You don't even have to download the files—you can stream them instead. There are plenty more features and you can read about them here.Download Page
Pandora
Pandora's always been a favorite on the iPhone, but it was kind of useless before multitasking support came around. Not much has changed since the release allowing it to play in the background, but nothing was really necessary. It's still the same great Pandora, offering personalized radio stations free of charge.Download Page
Remote
Apple's Remote went a long while without an update, but this last year brought some great new navigation features, controls, and more. When it comes to remotely accessing your iTunes library and streaming music via AirPlay, the Remote app is the best there is.Download Page
StreamToMe and Air Video
StreamToMe and Air Video are both apps that help you stream video from your computer to your iPhone, no matter where you are. They're especially compelling when you want to watch something at, say, the gym and you didn't have time to transcode and sync it to your device first. Whether you're connected to Wi-Fi or 3G, you can stream video directly to your phone from anywhere you are (the quality of your connection permitting, of course). Both apps have some subtle differences, such as StreamToMe's ability to stream more than just video and Air Video's option to pre-encode content for easier streaming, and either are worth the price of admission: $2.99.Download StreamToMe or Air Video
GoodPlayer
If you'd like to keep your videos in their native format rather than use Air Video or StreamToMe to stream iOS-friendly versions, GoodPlayer can handle the task—if your hardware's up to it. While GoodPlayer supports pretty much every video format you could need to play, it's limited by your iPhone's hardware. It tends to do better using the iPad's A5 chip, claiming playback of even 720p MKV files. It's a very capable player, but it'll be significantly more useful once the hardware catches up.Download Page
iBooks, Kindle, and Stanza
It's hard to consider any of the iPhone ebook readers the best choice because they're pretty similar. They all let you read on your phone, they all let you purchase books, and they're all free to download. While I'm partial to the Kindle app, it's mainly because I started with ebooks via the Kindle. Pick the ebook app that works the best for you—or don't, since they're all free downloads.Download iBooks, Kindle, or Stanza
Food and Entertainment
MenuPages
MenuPages isn't necessarily the best at discovering new food, but choosing a restaurant can often depend on what's on the menu. This app gives you access to the content of the popular web site when you're away from the computer.Download Page
IMDb
IMDb is a great resources for movie information, and the app does a good job of focusing a lot of information onto your iPhone's small screen. What's also great about the IMDb app is that it also serves as an excellent free option for finding movie showtimes.Download Page
TV Forecast
TV Forecast performs the simple function of keeping track of when the next episode of any show is going to air. Enter in just about any show that's currently running and TV Forecast will provide you with an attractive schedule tailored just for you. While you can grab the free version of TV Listings instead and save yourself $1.99, TV Forecast is a better option.Download Page
Netflix
The Netflix app does one important thing: allows you to stream content from your instant queue directly to your iPhone (or other iDevice). You can also search for titles and make (instant) queue adjustments, but those features come secondary to being able to stream Netflix to your phone. If you're looking to catch up on a few TV episodes or even want to watch a movie, you'll piss off David Lynch but you can do it.Download Page
Art and Photography
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Camera+
Camera+ pretty much turns your phone into a feature-rich point-and-shoot camera. Not only is it really fast at snapping photos, but it can enhance them, remove red eye, add special effects, and a whole lot more. It also comes with great features for taking the pictures themselves like stabilization and digital zoom that doesn't completely suck. It'll cost you $2 but it's worth it if you're really into taking pictures with your phone.Download Page
Sketchbook
While SketchBook is the sort of app that excels on a big screen, like the iPad's, it's nonetheless a great drawing app on the iPhone. With several brushes and pencils, you'll be surprised what you can actually draw with this app. When you're done, you can even export to a PSD (Photoshop Document) or a flattened image. It'll cost you $3, but if you're really into drawing you'll likely consider it worth the price.Download Page
If you're looking for more options, or just to see what's changed for 2011, check out last year's Lifehacker Pack for iPhone. Got any other free iPhone apps you find indispensable? Share your picks in the comments.
You can follow Adam Dachis, the author of this post, on Twitter, Google+, and Facebook. Twitter's the best way to contact him, too.
Source: http://lifehacker.com/5827212/lifehacker-pack-for-iphone-our-list-of-the-best-iphone-apps