Hi, everyone. Your tutorial on this page teaches you how to find and download the best apps on your iPhone 6s. Includes features such as browsing app markets, searching for app lists, reading customer reviews and ratings, downloading free apps and many more.
Table of Contents
Best Apps For Iphone 6s
1) Dropbox (£free)
1) Dropbox (£free)
You might question Dropbox being in this list. But while it’s admittedly not the most exciting app in the world, the cloud file-manager is a really great way to play with some of your iPhone’s new toys, entirely for free.
3D Touch on the Home screen icon gives you Quick Actions to search, upload a photo, view offline files, or get at your most recently edited document. Within the app, Peek and Pop gestures, respectively, offer fast previews and quick subsequent access to files.
Download Dropbox for iOS here
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2) Instagram (£free)
2) Instagram (£free)
Much like Dropbox, Instagram’s a good bet for playing around with 3D Touch. Quick Actions let you quickly get to direct messages and new activity, make a new post, or start a search.
Within the app, Peek proves excellent for viewing photos within feeds, but without opening new pages. This kind of browsing becomes second-nature so quickly that you’ll feel lost on a device without it.
Download Instagram for iOS here
3) Hipstamatic Camera (£1.49)
3) Hipstamatic Camera (£1.49)
The latest update to Hipstamatic Camera has proven controversial and divisive. The virtual hipster camera has now gone conventional, with a typically iOS camera view and the means to add filters after you’ve taken and saved a clean image. Horrors!
Never fear, though, because the classic view remains. Even better, there’s full-resolution processing for the new iPhone 6s and 6s Plus cameras, and 3D Touch for quickly getting to your last photo, or shooting a portrait, sunset or some food. Yes, food. So not entirely hipster-free, then.
Download Hipstamatic camera for iOS here
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4) Sky Guide (£2.29)
4) Sky Guide (£2.29)
When it comes to stargazing with an iPhone, Sky Guide is unquestionably the most usable and beautiful app of its kind. The interface is elegant, and the app is packed full of information, enabling you to dig deep into the facts, or just meander about the night sky.
It also takes full advantage of Apple’s latest kit: the app is fully optimised for larger iPhones (now including widescreen support); there’s a Today view Notification Center widget (rise/set times for the sun, moon and planets); you can search using Spotlight; and there are Quick Actions for favourites, search, and satellite passes.
Download Sky Guide for iOS here
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5) Documents (£free)
5) Documents (£free)
In iOS 9, you now get an optional iCloud Drive app (Settings > iCloud > iCloud Drive > Show on Home Screen to activate it), for delving into your cloud documents. But we’ve long used the free Documents app for this, because it gives you access to other online storage locations as well, along with enabling you to manage, archive and share files with ease.
With the latest iPhones, you get Quick Actions for speedy access to recent and favourite files, or for starting a search; and for any iOS 9 user, files can be searched for in Spotlight.
Download Documents for iOS here
6) Transmit iOS (£5.99)
6) Transmit iOS (£5.99)
Before now, file management on iOS was a major pain, and overly reliant on Dropbox, given that many apps integrated with it to some extent. With extensible Share sheets on iOS 8, however, the entire OS was opened up like never before.
Transmit brings the smarts from Panic’s OS X app to the iPhone, merges it with a beautiful and minimal interface, and also makes use of the iPhone 6 Plus in landscape by giving you a dual-pane view.
FTP, SFTP WebDAV, and S3 are supported, giving you the ability to use compatible apps to create your own virtual cloud storage in seconds.
Download Transmit iOS for iOS here
7) iMovie (£3.99; £free with new device)
7) iMovie (£3.99; £free with new device)
A year ago, Apple updated iMovie to make use of larger displays, giving you more room for editing and previewing your content. But this year’s biggest shift is in taking advantage of the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus being able to shoot 4K video.
Now, iTunes can create and share films at 3840 x 2160, or dial things down to a more modest 1080p — but at up to 60fps. So, rather madly, this means you can shoot and edit 4K video in a device that fits in your pocket, and all without squinting at edit points. Just avoid 4K on a 16 GB device, unless you want to run out of storage space very fast indeed.
Download iMovie for iOS here
8) Workflow (£3.99)
8) Workflow (£3.99)
Workflow’s a perfect app for tinkerers. It’s jam-packed full of actions that you can combine into workflows that save you time by automating processes. These can then be added to your home screen, or accessed from Share sheets. If you’re feeling especially lazy, you can pilfer what others have done instead from a handy online repository. With larger screens, you get the benefit of seeing more at any given time, potentially making crafting those workflows a whole lot easier.
Download Workflow for iOS here
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9) Shadowmatic (£2.29)
9) Shadowmatic (£2.29)
Shadowmatic is a fairly noodly, ambient game, reminiscent of iOS classic Zen Bound. But instead of wrapping rope around objects, here you spin levitating abstract shapes to form recognisable silhouettes within projected shadows. It’s one of the most visually striking games on iOS, and this kind of tactile experience simply feels so much better on a larger screen.
Download Shadowmatic for iOS here
10) GarageBand (£3.99; free on new devices)
10) GarageBand (£3.99; free on new devices)
GarageBand hits that sweet spot in being surprisingly powerful for musicians, but also extremely accessible for newbs. So whether you favour plugging in a guitar to blow up your ears through crazy distortion, tinkling digital ivories, or dragging and dropping loops, you’re covered. On the iPhone 5s, though, you needed to file down your fingers to a point, to get at all of the interface; on a larger iPhone, even the banana-thumbed can attempt to trouble the charts in no time.
Iphone 6s plus hidden features
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Removing cache helps iPhone to run faster. In the App Store, Podcasts, Music, Game Center, iMessage and Phone apps, tap on any single tab icon at the bottom of the screen 10 times in a row.
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Saving the fingerprint multiple times as different entries will make Touch ID much faster.
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
You can delete single digits when you tap the wrong number by swiping left or right on the screen where the numbers appear.
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Hold down the camera’s shutter button to shoot in burst mode.
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Use the volume up or down button on your headphones to snap a photo in the Camera app.
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
All of the drawing tools and the eraser are pressure sensitive in the Notes app.
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
When you get a notification at the top of the screen, pull the notification downward to reply without leaving the screen you’re on.
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
In the Mail app, tap on the subject line and swipe down to the bottom of the screen to save a draft.
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Apple iPhone Hidden Features
Simply tap and hold on the + symbol in Safari on the tab carousel view to open a screen that lists all of your recently closed tabs.
Conclusion
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