

These three apps bear the distinction of selling separately, which represents a departure from the selection criteria I’ve been using for roundups. So I downloaded six of the most noteworthy iPad office apps and spent a week using them for all my daily work.īecause you can’t ignore Apple’s iWork apps as a force to be reckoned with on the iPad, I made Pages, Numbers, and Keynote my first priority in testing. But the real measure of the platform’s productivity power is not the number of apps in the App Store but the quality of its best productivity apps. With the abundance of native iPad productivity apps in the App Store, the iPad has held a clear lead in the race to tablet-centricity. Yoink is one of those apps that you'll wonder how you did without.Since the day the iPad launched, zealous mobilophiles have wondered whether it might signal a new dawn in mobile computing–namely, one in which we all use a tablet in lieu of a desktop or laptop PC. There's even iCloud syncing for all of your items, Handoff support, an action extension, and more. To make things even easier, Yoink also has a keyboard so you can move items stored in Yoink into other apps without having to launch Yoink. Then move Yoink over and drag those items into your destination app. Drag items like photos and video clips, text, files, web snippets, URLs, emails, and other items into Yoink to store them temporarily. The best way to use Yoink is to have it as a Slide Over app on top of two other apps that you're working in with Split View mode. It helps eliminate the need to go back-and-forth so much and streamlines the process. Yoink is essentially a place to temporarily store items that you want to use later in another app.

And when you need to get some items from one app to another, there is no better app for the job than Yoink. If you're on an iPad, you may be working with multiple apps at once.
