There are two kinds of office-based professionals: One prefers to work on site despite the headaches of commuting, set hours, and wardrobe requirements, because working in-person with colleagues can’t be replicated. The other prefers to work at home, eschewing a commute, and preferring solitude or the company of nonhuman co-workers. According to Buffer’s 2019 State of Remote Report, despite having the choice to work anywhere they want, 84% of remote employees wouldn’t have it any other way.
Whichever type you are, it’s likely that these days you’re spending more time working at home than you expected. One oft-cited problem is the struggle to unplug after work. Productivity is key, as when projects take longer, they start invading your personal and family time. Communication and collaboration while working in different locations can mean people struggle to stay on top of fast-moving projects. Motivation can also take a hit when you remove the pressure of looking and being busy.
Thankfully, many can benefit from the assistance of a variety of mobile apps, designed to boost efficiency and productivity, enhance communications, foster concentration, promote a healthy lifestyle, and separate you from the job when the day is done. We’ve put together a slate of productivity tools to help you get more done, faster so you can enjoy life and work in the home lane. And if you’re looking for special items, see our list of the best apps for videoconferencing, note taking, meditation, recipes, grocery deliveries, and teacher resources articles too.
Slack
Slack is great for any kind of team, large or small. It helps consolidate communication and collaboration in one handy, easy-to-use interface so can stay on top of team activities minute to minute. Its flexibility lets you communicate and organize work with co-workers, message or call anyone or group, share and edit documents and collaborate with the right people on a project. Slack also lets you integrate third-party apps such as Google Drive, Salesforce, Dropbox, Asana, Twitter, and Zendesk.
Dropbox
Dropbox has long been the go-to app when you need to upload, transfer, and share files via the cloud. To support your remote office projects, Dropbox lets you back up and store photos, videos, documents, and other files to the cloud, and access files synced with any computer or mobile device — from anywhere. Sharing features make it easy to privately send files of any size to co-workers, and you can access any file in your account, even offline. Files are shared via a link rather than as email attachments. You can also use the app to scan documents with your camera, and transform receipts, documents, whiteboards, and notes into PDFs. Dropbox comes in a free version and a Plus version with more automated features and more storage space.
Asana
Asana’s mobile project management app gives you the inside track on all your work projects from anywhere. Wherever you are, Asana quickly updates you on your and co-worker tasks. Use it to add a task for to-dos, reminders, ideas, and requests, create projects to organize your tasks in lists or boards complete with due dates, assignees, followers, details, and files, and comment on tasks to clarify instructions or ask questions. Changes made in Asana’s mobile app will immediately appear in the web app. You can even use the app while offline, as updates will sync when you’re back online.
Toggl
When working at home, it’s easy to lose track of time. But Toggl is there to help you stay on track. This app tracks your hours and manages your workflow. Such tracking lets you see how you spend your time and use that data to break down your hours by projects, clients, and tasks. You can start tracking your hours in a browser, then stop it on your phone with all data synced between your phone, desktop, and web. The app features analytical time management reports, integrated calendars, suggestions on how to track activities, notifications that keep your tracking straight, and the ability to customize and organize your clients and projects.
7-Minute Workout
Even when you’re working at home, there’s no need to be a chair potato, and the 7-Minute Workout makes sure you get up off your chair to stay fit. It includes some of the best exercises for non-athletes — even those who find exercise boring — and allows you to do a quick 7-minute workout anytime, anywhere. The app can help you lose weight, tone your muscles, and flatten and strengthen your abs. Videos show you the proper technique to perform each exercise, and the app supports Google Fit tracking. The app is based on HICT (high intensity circuit training), which is designed to improve muscular and aerobic fitness. The 7-minute workout consists of 12 exercises, done for 30 seconds a time, with 10-second breaks between each exercise. All you need is a chair and a wall. Repeat circuits depending on how much time you have, and you can customize it so that it acts as your own personal trainer.
Spark
Almost anyone who uses email for work gets tons of unsolicited messages which are not immediately critical. Taking control of email means effectively prioritizing which messages demand action now, and which can be saved for later. Spark, an email cleaner, helps you focus on important emails by sending certain messages to the top of your mailbox. You can pin and reply to important messages, and batch archive the rest. A home screen widget lets you see the number of unread emails, search, or compose a new email.
Spark mail reduces noise by notifying you only about emails from people that you know. You can add multiple email accounts to Spark — Gmail, AOL, Hotmail, and more. Teams can discuss email privately to keep everyone in the loop. You can pre-write an email you send frequently, add placeholders for names or numbers, and use it only during work times, if you prefer.
Calendar
Calendar links up with all of your built-in calendar apps to create a single super calendar, designed to help you save time and be more productive, while spending less effort in organizing and synchronizing your life. Connect with all your Google, Apple, and Outlook calendars, view all of your events in a list or timeline view, or create events in Calendar and sync them with your other calendars. You’ll never miss anything important ever again because you looked in the wrong place.
Todoist
Many people find to-do lists intrusive, because you first have to enter all the tasks you need to accomplish and that in itself can get time-consuming. With Todoist, you enter your tasks once and use the app as an organizing hub for your life so nothing falls through the cracks. Use it to capture, organize, and prioritize tasks, record deadlines with reminders, set due dates, collaborate by assigning tasks to co-workers, track your progress, and pair it with other apps such as Gmail, Google Calendar, Slack, and Amazon Alexa.
Marco Polo
Part of working at home also means staying in touch with friends, relatives, and personal colleagues. Marco Polo gives you a compelling combo of texting, social media, and video chats in one app. It differs from other social media apps in that it does not collect or sell your data for advertising and eschews the typical likes and social competitions. Just like text messaging, you can communicate on your own time, but the app is face to face, so you get a closer connection with friends and loved ones and can communicate either by video or photo. There are no limits on length for video stored in the cloud. Marco Polo works over Wi-Fi anywhere in the world. Just search and find anyone via their mobile phone number. You can use the free version or upgrade to the premium version for $10 per month.
"Android" - Google News
April 03, 2020 at 11:15PM
https://ift.tt/2yxMRcy
The best work-from-home apps for Android and iOS - Yahoo Tech
"Android" - Google News
https://ift.tt/336ZsND
Shoes Man Tutorial
Pos News Update
Meme Update
Korean Entertainment News
Japan News Update
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "The best work-from-home apps for Android and iOS - Yahoo Tech"
Post a Comment