It’s pretty similar to the YouTube app on iOS and Android (before its latest update), but with a few features unique to it like gestures and uploading video. Perfect Tube is another app worth considering, packed with a number of features to help it out. If you think of a YouTube app for Windows Phone, you will likely think TubeCast and that’s about it. Yahoo LiveText / Google Play Yahoo LiveText / Google Play / Google Play Still, it’s something different to the numerous other messaging apps out there and is worth experimenting with. As you might have guessed, it’s designed around one-to-one conversations, but the initial release is a tad buggy, and really designed for short sentences than long messages. There’s no audio, so you only concentrate on the text in front of you while the video part, while strange initially, is strangely fun without sound. It’s called LiveText and the draw is you get to see a audio-less livestream of the person you’re chatting to while you text. Remember Yahoo!? You know, Yahoo! It has a search engine and other stuff. Pixcall / App Store Pixcall / App Store / App Store If you’re finding it tough to organise a Google Hangout session among friends, try this out instead. Once that’s done, you can view them individually or or as a collage that you can comment, share or download. Once it arrives, the group’s cameras will take a photo (it will give you 30mins, 1min or 10 seconds of notice). You can invite people via iMessage to take part and select a time. If you want something a bit easier, Pixcall is designed around getting all your friends to take photos of themselves simultaneously. Chances are some of your close friends are abroad or working far from home so trying to organise a call with them can take a lot of effort. This week features an accessible way to start learning to code, a messaging app with silent video and some new life in old birds. There are a lot of apps released on a daily basis, but not all of them are worth paying attention to. By the way, I did visit your website for help but there was no content that applied to my issues.EACH WEEK, WE highlight five apps that are worth downloading for your smartphone and tablet. Thanks in advance for your response which will help me to better use your app and may help others who read this to do the same. Greetings Developer, Tubecasts does what is says it does but I cannot give it four or even five stars until I know how to use it, especially, how to * delete * the files that I have imported from youtube - so, what am I missing here and where is the help option? In the future version, I will consider how to improve UI to make deleting easy to do." If you want to delete the imported file, please use native "Photos" or "Files" App to do it. This gesture will remove the entry, but won't delete the imported file. If you want to delete the entry in Tubecasts, please try to swipe left over the entry. Developer’s, response to my initial review (below). Otherwise, I like Tubecasts but I must decline to change the rating until and unless my concerns as stated in my original review below are fully addressed. Also, the Apple native “photos” app did not hold the audio import that I wanted to remove either. Hence it is clogging my iPad storage and the only way I know how to remove it is by deleting Tubecasts itself - not an acceptable solution for me. Apple’s native “Files” app does *not* display the audio song file I downloaded in spite of the fact that the file is still on my device (as evidenced by being able to play the tune in airplane mode (wifi only off - no cellular). However, importantly, number 2, How to delete the actual files from my device - well, that’s still a problem. My Updated review, following Developer’s response:
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