Category: Photo & Video
Lightricks’s Enlight is a formidable photo editing suite that’s
about as close to a full-fat desktop package as you’re likely to get for under
a fiver. Touch-up images with intuitive and precise controls, overlay photos,
swap filters and gradients to generate artistic effects recreating the style of
classic photography and more.
Main Idea: Enlight offers a comprehensive toolset aimed
at Instagramers, amateur photographers, as well as photo enthusiasts after
greater power from a mobile image editor.
uMake
Category: Productivity
Price: Free (in-app purchases, subscriptions)
uMake featured during Apple’s reveal of its iPad Pro
last October, and the app has already proved to be a
big hit with users of Apple’s enterprise-focused tablet. The app couples the
accuracy of a graphics tablet with the clarity of a 3D visualizer. Using an
Apple Pencil, users can sketch 2D planes in a 3D space, controlling the weight
and colour of their stokes, to create anything from rapid sketches to complex,
layered 3D objects.
Main Idea: uMake is targeted at discerning
professionals with experience of using 3D design software. A free subscription
is available, with pro tiers starting from £14.99 per month.
Alternatives: Tayasui
Memopad
LiquidText
Category: Productivity
Price: Free
Note-taking apps, such as Microsoft OneNote and Evernote,
have put many document viewing apps into the shade. The feature-rich
LiquidText, however, allows you to mark and annotate documents with speed, sort
and retrieve those annotations, and export them by type. All of which means it
should be easier to find the note you need, weather you’re using this app for
meeting minutes, coursework notes, and more besides.
Main Idea: LiquidText offers gesture-based reading and
annotation for documents including PDF, DOC, PPT and web pages.
source: http://www.itpro.co.uk/apps/22551/best-ipad-apps-for-2016-1
by Caroline Preece, Christine Schauer, Aaron Lee
http://www.buyetail.com
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