While the app is free for 500 MB of data per month, you can purchase more. This VPN is adorable and easy to use. Photoleap by Lightricks makes it easy to combine more than one photo into layers, which allows for incredibly artistic compositions using your photos. It also has a searchable photo library of free images to use in your creative process. Photoleap has some great tutorials, too, and a robust user community. Advanced editing tools such as Heal, Blur, and Reshape are available via the Pro version, which you can unlock for a per-month price of about $7 or an annual cost of $36. You can create, share, and edit documents on any device (your computer included) so that you never have to worry about where you saved a particular doc again. Several templates are available for starting a new document, including templates for brainstorming, taking meeting notes, and planning a project. The editing and collaboration tools are easy to use and unobtrusive, too. The app is free; use it with an existing or new Dropbox account. You’ll listen to over 40 storylines created by award-winning novelist Naomi Alderman and can mix in your own music if you want. You’ll collect resources to help you and other survivors along the way, such as batteries, food, and medical supplies. Training plans are tailored to specific goals, such as running a 5K, interval training to increase your ability to run faster and farther, mini-missions good for a quick run, and 5K, 10K, and 20K races with their own special stories. This app is free with optional in-app purchases. It is compatible with iPhone and Apple Watch. You can do group, text, voice, video, document, and picture messages without any SMS charges. Everything goes through your network connection, whether Wi-Fi or cellular. Launch the app, enter your phone number, add a picture for your secure Signal profile and start chatting as per usual. There are read receipts for text messages plus image annotation tools for working with others efficiently. Signal is a free app that is available for iOS and Android. There’s a Voice Boost function that normalizes voice podcasts, so they’re easier to hear in noisy environments, a Smart Speed feature that gets rid of long pauses between words to shorten talk podcasts without speeding up the actual recording, and a Twitter-powered podcast recommendations system. Overcast allows you to access password-protected podcasts from within the app and lets you upload your own audio files if you buy a premium subscription. RunPee takes the guesswork out of the equation with a regularly updated database of human-curated information on the best time for a pee break. You receive a discrete vibration to alert you to an upcoming pee time and a synopsis of what you are missing while you are in the restroom. It also features movie reviews, links to IMDB and Rotten Tomatoes, and information on extra scenes during or after the credits. The Deliveries app makes it simple to see what is heading your way and how long it might take, showing a summary list of all your shipments. Tapping a specific delivery gets you information on where your package is on a map, too. You can use your iPhone’s built-in sharing sheet to log your package tracking number, making it easy to keep everything in one place. This free-to-download app requires a $0.99 monthly or $4.99 annual subscription. The app uses Dark Sky’s accurate weather data to show daily, hourly, and up-to-the-minute weather facts. If rain or a snowstorm is coming, you can get a short-term forecast that lets you know what’s going on every minute. Plus, there are cool game-like activities, such as secret locations and achievements you can earn for experiencing different weather while traveling. The app is free to download, but most features require a Premium or Premium Ultra recurring monthly or yearly subscription. Pillow offers a chart showing your REM sleep, deep and light sleep, and any waking periods, and it tracks your heart rate if you’re using the Apple Watch app. Plus, if there are any noises during the night, such as when you talk in your sleep, the app records them—which could lead to some amusing times the next day. The app asks you to rate your mood each morning to help it better understand the kind of sleep you need to feel your best each day.

The free version does just about all anyone needs for regular use, though there is a premium in-app purchase that costs about $36 per year. The LastPass free version syncs passwords and other security data across either all your mobile devices or all your computers. If you want both, you need to buy the Premium subscription. So, a free download to your iPhone covers all your iPhones, iPads, and Apple Watch. You get unlimited password storage, a password generator, secure notes, easy password sharing, and a way to test your security on your device. You can log in to the service with FaceID if you have an iPhone X or higher or TouchID on a compatible iPhone. It has support for 38 languages, including three kinds of Arabic, Chinese, and English dialects as well as French, German, Greek, Hindi, Swedish, Japanese, Thai, and Turkish. If you want more than the 500 translations per month from the free version, you’ll need to pay for one of the subscriptions, which begin at about $5 per month and top out at about $70. Use Bear to quickly jot down all those little things you need to keep handy at all times. You can search from the iOS app for any text string you want, and you can categorize your notes with tags. Bear uses a clean, minimalist interface and simple visual themes (dark, light, sepia) to stay out of your way while you use the app. It comes with a host of options such as bold, italic, underline, bullets, to-do check boxes, and more. The app supports markdown for formatting, as well, and you can export to HTML, DOCX, RTF, PDF, or JPG. On the iPad, Bear accommodates Split View and drag and drop. The subscription is affordable at about $15 per year and includes advanced themes.