Done by: Omar alamimi
Grade : 12BB
Submit to : Mr. Wajde Ahmed
Not that we’d ever discourage you from taking notes in
class, but if your wrist happens to hurt from all that
scribbling, ShareYourBoard promises sweet relief.
Simply take a picture of any white board in sight—it
helps to snag a good seat toward the front of class—
and this app will adjust the white balance to give you a
crystal-clear snapshot of that day’s lesson. Then it’s up
to you to decipher your professor’s chicken-scratch.
(Free for Android)
This powerful scheduling app won’t get you an A in
bio, but it will help you ace time management.
iStudiezPro allows you to input your class schedule
and homework into a built-in planner, then alerts you
of approaching deadlines, keeps track of your grades,
organizes your extracurricular schedule, and counts
down to your next class. Now if only it counted down
to happy hour. ($2.99 for iPhone)
Any student with a Facebook account and a winning
smile knows that photos are the lifeblood of the online
college experience. And sometimes—actually, most
times—it’s better to be behind the camera than to
boost your tag count. PicPlz boasts an impressive array
of hip, professional photo filters, from Polaroid chic to
1970s vintage, all of which instantly polish up your
pictures—and brighten up your friends’ feeds. (Free
for Android and iPhone)
Analyzing Beowulf with a full slate of football on TV is
an agonizing assignment for the easily sidetracked.
That’s where Study Buddy comes in: Every time you
take a break from obsessing over Ulysses—whether it’s
answering a call or cueing up a song—the app records
it as a distraction and logs a “Graph of Study
Efficiency” to let you know how focused you really are
(and to tell you to get the hell back to work.) Consider
it your own personal taskmaster. ($0.99 for iPhone)
A stack of college textbooks can cost more than major
surgery. This Amazon app will keep your wallet nice
and fat: Snap a photo of your book’s barcode, and it’ll
tell you how and where to get it cheaper. Best of all,
you can sell back your old used textbooks in exchange
for Amazon gift cards. (Free for Android and iPhone)
If you’ve got an iPad, you can also eliminate the
textbook entirely by browsing through Apple’s iBooks
2 store where you’ll find cheaper, digitized versions of
the same tomes. No more breaking your back—or the
bank. (iBooks vary in cost, but many are around $15
each.)
Evernote is the ultimate organisation tool that syncs all
your data on all of your devices. From to-do lists to
lecture notes, it's a great app for organising your entire
life in folders that you can access on your phone, tablet
and laptop, even without an internet connection. It
works across file formats too, so you can save notes in
text, image, audio and web links to look at later.

Most helpful apps for university students

  • 1.
    Done by: Omaralamimi Grade : 12BB Submit to : Mr. Wajde Ahmed
  • 2.
    Not that we’dever discourage you from taking notes in class, but if your wrist happens to hurt from all that scribbling, ShareYourBoard promises sweet relief. Simply take a picture of any white board in sight—it helps to snag a good seat toward the front of class— and this app will adjust the white balance to give you a crystal-clear snapshot of that day’s lesson. Then it’s up to you to decipher your professor’s chicken-scratch. (Free for Android)
  • 3.
    This powerful schedulingapp won’t get you an A in bio, but it will help you ace time management. iStudiezPro allows you to input your class schedule and homework into a built-in planner, then alerts you of approaching deadlines, keeps track of your grades, organizes your extracurricular schedule, and counts down to your next class. Now if only it counted down to happy hour. ($2.99 for iPhone)
  • 4.
    Any student witha Facebook account and a winning smile knows that photos are the lifeblood of the online college experience. And sometimes—actually, most times—it’s better to be behind the camera than to boost your tag count. PicPlz boasts an impressive array of hip, professional photo filters, from Polaroid chic to 1970s vintage, all of which instantly polish up your pictures—and brighten up your friends’ feeds. (Free for Android and iPhone)
  • 5.
    Analyzing Beowulf witha full slate of football on TV is an agonizing assignment for the easily sidetracked. That’s where Study Buddy comes in: Every time you take a break from obsessing over Ulysses—whether it’s answering a call or cueing up a song—the app records it as a distraction and logs a “Graph of Study Efficiency” to let you know how focused you really are (and to tell you to get the hell back to work.) Consider it your own personal taskmaster. ($0.99 for iPhone)
  • 6.
    A stack ofcollege textbooks can cost more than major surgery. This Amazon app will keep your wallet nice and fat: Snap a photo of your book’s barcode, and it’ll tell you how and where to get it cheaper. Best of all, you can sell back your old used textbooks in exchange for Amazon gift cards. (Free for Android and iPhone) If you’ve got an iPad, you can also eliminate the textbook entirely by browsing through Apple’s iBooks 2 store where you’ll find cheaper, digitized versions of the same tomes. No more breaking your back—or the bank. (iBooks vary in cost, but many are around $15 each.)
  • 7.
    Evernote is theultimate organisation tool that syncs all your data on all of your devices. From to-do lists to lecture notes, it's a great app for organising your entire life in folders that you can access on your phone, tablet and laptop, even without an internet connection. It works across file formats too, so you can save notes in text, image, audio and web links to look at later.