Apps
»PriceFree
»Designed forPhone and tablet
»Requires Android4.1
Yummly
Get personalised recipe
recommendations
BIGOVEN: 350,000+ RECIPES » Save favourite recipes, add your
own, make shopping lists and plan menus on a calendar
»like this?
try this!
Yummly offers a great way
to discover new dishes –
sourced from various sites
- to suit your tastes and dietary
preferences. The home menu serves
up a scrolling grid of scrumptious-
looking photos to browse. Tapping
one brings it up in fullscreen, where
an upwards swipe reveals a tabbed
view of ingredients, nutritional info
and directions – the latter can be
made fullscreen for easier reading.
Tapping the Yum icon for any dish not
only adds it to your recipe box (which
can be subdivided into collections),
but helps the app to make personal
recommendations for you. There’s
also a powerful search facility that
allows you to filter results by multiple
factors, including preparation time
and nutrition (with sliders for calories,
fat etc). The only slight downside to a
very tasty app is the lack of the iOS
version’s shopping list feature.
Google Fit
Keep track of all your health and fitness data
Android Wear smartwatch or
compatible fitness tracker on your
wrist – it detects these automatically
and, for walking and running, even
counts the steps you make. If you
forget to take your device with you,
no problem: you can always manually
add an activity later, along with
figures for your weight and heart rate
if you like.
A circular diagram for your daily
exercise activity shows how much
more you have to do in order to reach
the daily goal (in terms of exercise
time) you’ve set. After using the app
for several days, it’ll suggest further
goals for you to help you make
progress. All your fitness activity,
weight and heart rate data can be
viewed on charts – covering a day,
week or month – and also accessed
via a web portal.
Since the app’s built-in fitness
tracking is a bit limited, you may well
Going head to head with
Apple’s new Health app
built into iOS 8, Google’s
Android equivalent is a similar
hub for all your health and fitness
data. However, unlike its iOS rival,
which merely collates data from
third-party fitness apps, Google
Fit also offers its own built-in
tracking of three activities:
walking, running and cycling. With
the phone in your pocket – or
A circular diagram shows time spent
walking, running and cycling
The detailed graph shows activity for the
day, week or month
See a history of your exercise and
whether you met your goals
FotoSwipe
Swipe photos from one
device to another
Transferring photos from
one device to another can
be a bit of a pain, usually
involving a workaround such as
sending them by email or text
message. The FotoSwipe app aims
to make the process child’s play by
enabling you to swipe up to ten
selected photos to the edge of the
sender’s screen and then swiping on
the other device to receive them.
Since it’s cross-platform, it even
works with iOS devices.
Helpfully, FotoSwipe arranges your
pictures into folders for various
camera/social apps and downloads,
although sadly it can’t access your
Google+ Photos gallery. With the app
open on both devices, ideally placed
side by side, tap to tick the photos
you want to transfer, then long-press
one and swipe to edge of the screen
to send. Now quickly continue to
swipe across on the other device to
receive the photo(s) in the app’s
FotoSwipe folder. The process only
takes a few seconds per photo,
although it’ll be longer if you raise the
picture quality in the settings. It’s a
great idea and works pretty well
once you figure out its foibles.
»PriceFree
»Designed forPhone and tablet
»Requires Android2.3.3
Select some photos, then long-press and
swipe to the edge to send
No matter how you tilt the device, the frame
stays horizontal