Top 230 Best iPad Apps 2013
http://www.techradar.com/news/mobile-computing/tablets/top-200-best-ipad-apps-2012-681998
Best iPad apps: Education
Here is just the first 80:
App name: Learnist
Developer: Grockit
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Learnist is kind of like Pinterest for education - you can use it to browse and create learning boards, with mix media and text from different sources to give you all the information you need. This app is a little weak when it comes to creating the learning boards, but it's easy to find boards on all sorts of topics, packed with information. It's a great way to find out about a new subject.
Best iPad apps: Education
App name: Learnist
Developer: Grockit
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Learnist is kind of like Pinterest for education - you can use it to browse and create learning boards, with mix media and text from different sources to give you all the information you need. This app is a little weak when it comes to creating the learning boards, but it's easy to find boards on all sorts of topics, packed with information. It's a great way to find out about a new subject.
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App name: iTunes U
Developer: Apple
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
iTunes U enables educational institutions to provide course notes and materials for students, including lecture recordings (whether that be audio or video). You can take notes while watching lectures and subscribe to the courses to make sure you don't miss anything. Even if you're not at university, you can use its free course to get learning about new topics!
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App name: Move the Turtle. Programming for kids
Developer: Next is Great
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Replicating the old educational idea of programming a 'turtle' to move around using the Logo programming language, the Move the Turtle app… well, does just that. This app offers a grounding in how software works, teaching your child to build commands and solve problems.
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App name: Little Digits
Developer: Cowly Owl Ltd
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
There are lots of counting and arithmetic apps on the App Store, but Little Digits is genius in its simplicity. The iPad can detect up to 10 touch inputs at a time, so this app tasks your child with placing the correct number of fingers on screen to match the numbers. It really helps kids to make the connection, and there are maths problems to keep them advancing.
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App name: DK The Human Body App
Developer: Dorling Kindersley Ltd
Price: £4.99
Link: Get from iTunes
DK has been doing a great job of bringing its considerable educational muscle to bear on the iPad, and DK The Human Body App is no exception. Full of detailed diagrams, huge amounts of information and even a rotatable 3D human body with layers you can toggle on and off, it really shows how interactive apps can enhance the way we learn.
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Best iPad apps: Entertainment
App name: Netflix
Developer: Netflix Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Netflix offers the best range of TV for £6 per month, even if its UK offering pales compared to what's available in the US. Still, you get multiple seasons of plenty of great shows, along with loads of films, both older and newer. Clever features such as tracking your place in shows across platforms make it a winner.
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App name: Lovefilm Player for iPad
Developer: Lovefilm
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Lovefilm (now owned by Amazon) has expanded out of being just a DVD rental company to offer streaming TV and films. Its TV content isn't up to Netflix's standards, but it often has flashier, newer films, and you can get its streaming-only service for just £5, for your Lovefilm Player for iPad app or other connected devices.
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App name: Sky Go
Developer: BSkyB
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
If you're a Sky subscriber, Sky Go is an essential download. Depending on your package, you can watch up to 32 live channels, including movies and sports, and Sky's on-demand catalogue. It even works over 3G, so you can watch the football just about anywhere.
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App name: BBC iPlayer
Developer: Media Application Technologies Ltd
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
The BBC led the way in on-demand content with the launch of its browser-based iPlayer, and this slick BBC iPlayer app streams a great range of high-quality video content to your iPad. Its custom interface is easy to browse, and you can now even download shows to watch offline while travelling. It also enables you to watch live TV.
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App name: zeebox
Developer: zeebox
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
This app takes the idea of the iPad as a second screen while watching TV to a new level. Zeebox wraps up information about the show you're watching with social streams, it's got information about viewer opinion and can even be used to control certain set-top boxes. It can even be something as mundane as a TV guide, if you're so inclined.
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App name: TVCatchup Live TV
Developer: GZero Ltd
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
You can turn you iPad into a TV with a hardware add-on such as the Tizi, but if you've got a decent internet connection, it's much easier to use this TVCatchup Live TV app. Using it, you can stream the Freeview channels directly to your iPad, with a now and next guide so you can see what's on. It's simple, but works brilliantly.
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Best iPad apps: Finance
App name: Account Tracker
Developer: Graham Haley
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Keep track of your spending and balance over multiple accounts with the useful Account Tracker app. It offers support for multiple currencies, enables you to set up alerts to warn if you're going to go overdrawn, enables you to search for transactions and export the information for sending out or analysing later.
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App name: Meter Readings
Developer: Graham Haley
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Meter Readings is a great way to avoid any nasty surprises when your gas or electricity bill comes. Use it to keep track of your household meters, and it'll show you usage patterns over time, estimate what the cost will be, and even enable you to check your bills by comparing its figures to what you're being charged. And yes, it'll remind you to take readings.
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Best iPad apps: Food & Drink
App name: Jamie's Recipes
Developer: Zolmo
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
The Jamie's Recipes app gives a bunch of recipes for free, but after that you'll have to buy 'packs' to see more content. They're well worth it, though, with easy-to-follow instructions, beautiful images and great search features. You can also add ingredients you need to a shopping list, synced to an iPhone.
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App name: Cooking Planit HD
Developer: Caelo Media LLC
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Most cooking apps assume a certain level of competency - especially if you're going to actually make the food in the time predicted. Cooking Planit HD is for complete beginners. It offers great features, such as being able to save meals (combinations of dishes), but the killer feature is its super-easy, step-by-step instructions. A timer on the screen helps you keep on top of cooking times, and tells you exactly what to do in what order to keep things going smoothly - no experience necessary.
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App name: Basil Smart Recipe Manager
Developer: Kyle Baxter
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Basil Smart Recipe Manager is a bit smarter than a standard recipe app. Instead of just being loaded with its own cooking ideas, it can search various cooking websites and turn its recipes into easy-to-follow instructions within the app. There's a large list of compatible sites, so you'll always be able to find something amazing to cook.
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App name: BBC Good Food
Developer: BBC Worldwide Ltd
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
This free BBC Good Food app comes with 20 recipes when you download it, but you can buy extra recipe packs to bulk out its options, and they're great value. Each one has nearly 200 new recipes in, and covers a different area, from healthy eating, to quick cooking and, of course, delicious cakes - among others.
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App name: toptable for iPad
Developer: OpenTable Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Sometimes, you don't want to cook. It's a good thing, then, that the world is packed with great places to eat. The toptable for iPad app enables you to make bookings at thousands of restaurants right from your iPad, either by searching or just browsing a map to see what's nearby. It also offers restaurant reviews and menus.
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Best iPad apps: Games
App name: Hero Academy
Developer: Robot Entertainment
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
This turn-based strategy game is perfect for mobile hardcore games. The aim is to defeat your opponent on a chess-like board using your team of fantasy heroes. Hero Academy's asynchronous play means that you can take your turn, wait for your opponent to go, then take your turn whenever you want. It all means it's pick-up-and-play, but it offers a huge amount of depth in how you can play it.
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App name: Bastion
Developer: Supergiant Games LLC and Warner Bros
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
This engrossing RPG tasks you with saving a destroyed civilisation, through beautifully designed broken worlds. Guided only by a mysterious narrator rivalling Morgan Freeman for gravitas and solemn intonation, you pick a range of weapons and fight hordes of enemies to restore the titular Bastion. It's a brilliant experience, with a choice of controls for the touchscreen.
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App name: Splice: Tree of Life
Developer: Cipher Prime Studios
Price: £2.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Splice: Tree of Life is an artistic puzzler that takes place in a microbial world. In each level, you have to reshape the structure you're given in a target number of moves (or 'splices'). It rewards forward planning, and isn't shy of giving you some extremely difficult puzzles to work with. It works perfectly on the iPad, and will steal hours from you.
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App name: Need for Speed: Most Wanted
Developer: Electronic Arts Inc
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Need for Speed: Most Wanted is a blistering arcade racer that puts you in various desirable cars, racing to beat your opponents and outrun the police. Drifting around corners, boosting with nitros and major crashes are the order of the day. As you progress and pick up points, you can combine them with the points you get from the console version to climb the leader boards. It looks great, handles brilliantly and is a huge amount of fun.
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App name: Jetpack Joyride
Developer: Halfbrick
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
If you've got a couple of minutes to spare, Jetpack Joyrideis the perfect game. It's an endless runner with simple controls - touch to go up, release to go down - but the addition of vehicles and gadgets mean no two runs are ever the same. It's a fast-paced reflex-tester, and it records your high scores on Game Center, so you can compete against your friends.
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App name: Letterpress
Developer: Atebits
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
A brutal game of word combat - in Letterpress, you have a grid of letters, and you take control of letters by using them in words. The aim is to have the most letters in your control when the board gets 100% taken. the strategy comes from the fact that you can't use words twice, and it's easy to take control of your opponent's letters. A turn-based battle of strategy and vocabulary, Letterpress is really easy to play, and you can try it for free.
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Best iPad apps: Health & Fitness
App name: runtastic PushUps PRO
Developer: runtastic
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
Runtastic PushUps PRO is designed to help push you develop your fitness and strength, enabling you to select training regimes, motivating you during workouts and storing information on how well you do each day. It's actually part of a range from runtastic, including sit up and squats, if you prefer.
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App name: iCircuit Training
Developer: Matt Burnett
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
The iCircuit Training app offers 18 pre-designed circuits, to get you doing different exercises that train every part of your body. You don't need equipment for any of them (though a bit of space might be wise). There are videos to show you how to perform the 50 different exercise types, and it keeps logs so you can track your progress.
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App name: Calorie Counter & Diet Tracker
Developer: MyFitnessPal LLC
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Keep track of how many calories you're consuming each day with the Calorie Counter & Diet Tracker app's huge database (over two million foods). Once you start seeing how much a chocolate bar will add to your daily total, you might think twice about it if you're trying to lose weight. Even if you're not, it can help you to keep a handle on how healthily you're eating.
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Best iPad apps: Lifestyle
App name: Amazon Windowshop
Developer: Amazon.com Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Amazon Windowshop presents you with a grid of items, making it easier than ever to flick through what's on offer. It's divided into columns of different product types, so you can quickly browse the bestsellers in any category. Select an item and you get all of the usual Amazon information, and you can buy right from in the app.
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App name: Louvre HD
Developer: Evolution Apps
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
Instead of a hefty coffee table book full of art, you can just fill your iPad with it. The Louvre HD app offers 770 of the Louvre's masterpieces to browse through, which can be searched by artist or time (and you can add your favourites). If you want to add an element of ambient class to proceedings, you can set it to show them as a slideshow (and it can even play classical music).
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App name: Day One Journal
Developer: Bloom Built LLC
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
If you want to keep a diary of your days, this is the best way to do it electronically. Day One syncs across your iPhone and iPad, so you have it with you everywhere. Write text entries, add photos and locations, tag entries so they can be found later and much more. Oh, and you can set a passcode lock for the app, so prying eyes don't get in.
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App name: eBay for iPad
Developer: eBay Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
With eBay having long since passed from virtual garage sale to virtual shopping mall filled with known selling brands, it's a more popular way than ever to buy things. The eBay for iPad app presents it all clearly and crisply - it's filled with photos and the items, with prices nice and prominent. You can customise its home screen with your favourite searches, too.
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App name: Cards
Developer: Apple
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Cards enables you create physical greetings cards to send out to people from your iOS device. You can order beautiful letterpress cards, customised with your photos and words. It grabs information directly from your phone, such as adding the names of places photographs were taken, and enabling you to choose who to send it to from your contacts. It'll even send you a notification on the day your card is due to arrive.
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Best iPad apps: Medical
App name: Gray's Anatomy Premium for iPad
Developer: Archibald Industries
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Gray's Anatomy turns the old medical tome into an interactive iPad extravaganza. It contains all the illustrations from Gray's Anatomy at high resolution, as well as 3D models. You can also search the app, create you own notes for illustration, save bookmarks and email information you want to share from the app.
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App name: Muscle & Bone Anatomy 3D
Developer: Real Bodywork
Price: £4.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Muscle & Bone Anatomy 3D is a reference app for the muscles and skeleton that features 3D models of the body with labels linking you through to more information. It also has the ability to group muscles into 'actions' and see how they combine to let you move in real life, and there are quizzes to test your knowledge.
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App name: Patient.co.uk
Developer: EGTON
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Nobody wants to come across as a hypochondriac, but it's still sensible to check your symptoms whenever you feel ill. The Patient.co.uk app offers a large database to search, with information on various diseases and conditions, as well as general health information. The information comes directly from GPs, and the app enables you to find local health services if you're in England.
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Best iPad apps: Music
App name: GarageBand
Developer: Apple
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
GarageBand really is music-making made easy. It enables you to play a collection of software instruments and record them to put together a song. for beginners, there are Smart Instruments, which simplify playing the instruments, while experienced musicians can plug in their own guitar or some MIDI instruments to record. You can then edit the track and send it out into the world.
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App name: Rdio
Developer: Rdio
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
The Rdio music-streaming service will set you back £9.99 per month for mobile access, but what that gets you is one of the most impressive libraries out there for streaming, great streaming 'radio' stations, offline listening and unlimited playlists. The Rdio appis really easy to use, too.
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App name: djay
Developer: algoriddim
Price: £13.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Further proving that the iPad can become just about anything if developers try hard enough, djay turns it into a pair of decks. Choose two tracks from your iTunes library, and get mixing. With mixer, tempo and EQ controls, automatic beat matching, cue point triggering and loads of other features, it's actually a surprisingly professional setup.
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App name: DM1 - The Drum Machine
Developer: Fingerlab
Price: £4.99
Link: Get from iTunes
This vintage drum machine app takes the kind of setup that might have set you back hundreds of pounds in the past and delivers it your iPad, for under a fiver. Packed with 86 drum kits, and filled with features for getting just the sound you want, electronic musicians will lose themselves in this DM1 app for hours at a time.
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App name: Equalizer Pro
Developer: Chun-Koo Park
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
If you want more control over how your music sounds on your iPad, Equalizer Pro is the app to get. Whether you just fancy tweaking the balance of a song, or whether you want to do it for everything to complement your headphones, this app gives you total control over your music's EQ. You can draw curves with an unlimited number of points, and see (and hear) the results immediately.
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Best iPad apps: Navigation
App name: TomTom UK & Ireland
Developer: TomTom
Price: £39.99
Link: Get from iTunes
A turn-by-turn navigation app like this is only really of full use on a 3G/4G iPad, due to its inclusion of a GPS chip, but even if you just have a Wi-Fi model, TomTom UK & Ireland's mapping is second to none, its instructions are clear and accurate, and you can opt to have live traffic data for a small extra fee.
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App name: Waze social GPS traffic & gas
Developer: Waze Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
If you don't want to pay £40 for TomTom's mapping service, Waze's community-driven approach is hard to beat. The Waze social GPS traffic & gas app will still get you safely around the country, and includes traffic information, along with road, hazard and police information, supplied by the community.
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App name: AA Parking
Developer: Parkopedia Ltd
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Trying to find a parking space can add a huge amount of time onto a journey if you don't know where to go. Do your research with the AA Parking app beforehand, though, and you'll know exactly where you need to end up. It could even save you money, by helping you find the cheapest (or free) car park.
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App name: CamerAlert
Developer: PocketGPSWorld.com Ltd
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Doing your research with CamerAlert could save you a bunch of money. It's able to show you the locations of speed cameras around the country, so you'll always know where the danger is. To keep its database up to date, you need to pay a subscription, but it's worth it to ensure that you don't get a hefty fine.
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App name: AA Time Machine
Developer: The Automobile Association Limited
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
AA Time Machine isn't really so much a navigation app as one for history buffs, but it's clever anyway. It enables you to buy maps from the past to overlay on today's maps, to see how things have changed. You can go from 1816 through to today, and see how areas have built up (or, indeed, disappeared) over time.
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Best iPad apps: News
App name: Instapaper
Developer: Marco Arment
Price: £2.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Instapaper is one of the iPad apps that absolutely everyone should own - once you've tried Instapaper, you'll wonder what you did before. It enables you to save articles you've found online to read later - it downloads the text and caches it offline. It means that if you spot something interesting and don't have time to read it, you can send it to Instapaper and eventually browse it whenever you're ready.
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App name: Reeder for iPad
Developer: Silvio Rizzi
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Reeder for iPad is a Google Reader client that presents your saved RSS feeds in a way that makes them incredibly easy to browse and leaf through. You skip through everything that's accumulated in a clear layout, and it's got loads of social and reading features, including sending articles to Instapaper.
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App name: Flipboard: Your Social News Magazine
Developer: Flipboard Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Starting out as a way to merge your social feeds with your RSS feeds, Flipboard has grown into a mini publishing platform in its own right. You can still use it to turn your Twitter, Flickr and Facebook feeds into mini magazines, effectively, but it also offers interesting articles through its 'Cover Stories' feature, and includes content from the New York Times and Rolling Stone.
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App name: BBC News
Developer: Media Applications Technologies Limited
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
If you want to make sure you're always up to date with what's happening in the world, BBC News is the app to get. It presents all of the BBC's online news stories in an easy-to-browse interface, complete with relevant video content. You can can personalise the app to highlight the topics that are most relevant to you, and watch the BBC News channel live at any time.
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App name: The Early Edition 2
Developer: Glasshouse Apps Pty Ltd
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
The idea of The Early Edition 2 is that you create a daily newspaper, just for you. You tell it where to get content from, using individual RSS feeds, or by linking it to your Google Reader account, and it pulls in all of the words and pictures and lays it out. Everything will be available offline, so you can still read it on the Tube.
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Best iPad apps: Photo & Video
App name: Camera+ for iPad
Developer: tap tap tap
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Camera+ is essential on iPhone, but it's also great on iPad, even if you don't take many photos with your tablet. It syncs with the Lightbox of Camera+ for iPhone, so any photos you take appear on it automatically. Then, you can apply all the edits you need on the larger screen, giving you more space to see what you're doing, and have more controls to hand.
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App name: iPhoto
Developer: Apple
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
iPhoto looks fairly simple, but it's full of surprisingly powerful tools. You can apply all sorts of filters and brushes, applying spot fixes and tweaks rather than having to make changes to your entire photo. It's all been heavily optimised for the touchscreen, and comes with great photo-sorting features, including creating 'journals'.
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App name: Adobe Photoshop Touch
Developer: Adobe Systems Inc
Price: £6.99
Link: Get from iTunes
It may not be the full desktop version of Photoshop, but Adobe's tablet version of its image-manipulation app is still mightily impressive. Adobe Photoshop Touch features lots of advanced tools, all tweaked for touchscreen control. You can still work in layers, and produce amazing final images. The tutorials are great, too, enabling anyone to learn to use it quickly.
Read: Adobe Photoshop Touch review
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App name: iMovie
Developer: Apple
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Apple's video-editing app offers intuitive gesture controls, making it easy to select clips, import them into your project, trim them, split them and move them around in the timeline. You can also add sound effects, record voiceovers and add soundtracks. iMovie also has the fun Trailers feature from the desktop version, guiding you through making a short, fun film.
iMovie for iPad: how to edit your videos quickly and easily
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App name: Luminance
Developer: Subsplash Inc
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
Luminance offers one of the simplest photo editing interfaces out there for beginners, but delve into it and you'll quickly find a huge range of sliders and options to tinker with, bringing the most out of your photos. It works in layers, so you can experiment with building up changes and easily go back to how it was before.
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Best iPad apps: Productivity
App name: Pages
Developer: Apple
Price: £6.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Pages isn't the app you'll reach for when you just need to type something simple, but it's unsurpassed for when you need to lay out something more complicated. It's easy to change the look of your document, change the flow of the text and drop in images - the words will flow about the pictures flawlessly. Font control is just a tap away, too, making this a great, simple publishing app.
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App name: Keynote
Developer: Apple
Price: £6.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Keynote is incredibly powerful not just as a presenting tool, but as a creation one. You can put together slideshows with all sorts of animation using its simple tools, with the Magic Move tool offering serious levels of customisation. And by hooking your iPad up to a projector (or using AirPlay), you can show your presentation on the big screen, while notes are displayed on your iPad.
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App name: Byword
Developer: Metaclassy, Lda
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Byword is designed to be a distraction-free writing environment, focusing you solely on what you need to write, whether that's a letter, a speech, or a list of the best apps for iPad. It offers word and character count tools, and extra keyboard buttons for commonly used punctuation. It can save your files to Dropbox or iCloud, and you can edit in Markdown for writing blog posts.
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App name: Things for iPad
Developer: Cultured Code
Price: £13.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Things is the ultimate task manager. It's not cheap, but it's incredibly powerful, enabling you to sync tasks across devices, manage the timing of your tasks, divide them up by category, tag them for filtering, add repeating tasks and due dates... if you need to keep on top of a lot of activities, there's no better way.
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App name: Evernote
Developer: Evernote
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Evernote is a mixture of note-taking, reminders and organisation. It enables you to add, well, just about anything as a note, that you can go back and review from any device, thanks to its cloud syncing. You can divide different areas of your life with Notebooks, and even add images of handwritten notes, which Evernote will scan and make searchable. To get the best out of it, you need a premium subscription, but it'll help you organise your life.
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App name: Agenda Calendar
Developer: savvy apps
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
Calendars need to give you lots of information at a glance, and Agenda Calendar is designed to be as slick and simple as possible. Supporting Google Calendars, iCloud and Microsoft Exchange through the default Calendar app's integration, it makes scheduling as easy as it can be. It also integrates with the iOS Reminders app, and you can use gestures to control your view quickly.
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App name: Dropbox
Developer: Dropbox
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Dropbox is one of the best cloud syncing and storage services, and its app is just as good. You're limited in what you can upload to it (just photos and videos from your Camera Roll), but you can access all of your files and folders. The app itself can view many files, but if there's something you want to open and edit in another app (such as opening a presentation in Keynote), you can just the Open With... command. Because of this, it's the perfect way to transfer files to your iPad.
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App name: Due - super fast reminder
Developer: Phocus LLP
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Apple's built-in Reminders app is good, but it lacks a few handy features that Due provides. Due makes it fast to add reminders, but it also puts loads of extra options just a tap away. You can set a reminder to recur, or to turn an audible alarm on or off, or you can delay a timer by 10 minutes, an hour or a day, all with just a single tap each - no need to go delving into menus. It makes it much easier to manage the little tasks you might otherwise forget.
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Best iPad apps: Reference
App name: Leonardo da Vinci: Anatomy
Developer: Touch Press LLP
Price: £9.99
Link: Get from iTunes
This collection of anatomical drawings by Leonardo da Vinci, from the Windsor Collection, enables you to get closer to these ancient drawings than you could ever hope normally. The drawings are presented in stunning detail, complete with notes (translated into English). In Leonardo da Vinci: Anatomy you can translate the mirror writing, see how closely the drawings match the real human body, and get insight into the works from the collection's curator.
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App name: Pyramids 3D
Developer: Touch Press LLP
Price: £9.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Pyramids 3D is a genuinely amazing app for history buffs. You can explore a 3D version of the Giza Plateau, and go into the tombs in full 3D environments, including into tunnels closed to the public in real life. All the tombs are presented with their hieroglyphics, and you can even see the paintings as they were when new. It's all guided by experts, and there are 3D models of many objects found within the tombs, including Tutankhamen's golden mask.
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App name: Atlas by Collins
Developer: Harper Collins Publishers Limited
Price: £4.99
Link: Get from iTunes
The Atlas by Collins app presents the Earth in different globe views, each one offering a huge amount of information and detail. There are physical maps, political maps, environmental ones and many others, including modern topics such as communications and energy. You can zoom down to street level, and explore hundreds of thousands of locations.
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App name: Brian Cox's Wonders of the Universe
Developer: Harper Collins Publishers Limited
Price: £3.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Brian Cox's Wonders of the Universe accompanies the BBC series of the same name, and goes well beyond what you can see in a TV series. There are videos and articles, sure, but you can also explore space, from the surface of Mars out to beyond the boundaries of our solar system.
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App name: Star Walk for iPad
Developer: Vito Technology Inc
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Star Walk for iPad is an augmented reality app that makes it easier than ever to know what you're looking at when you look up at the sky at night. It can track and pick out the constellations, point out planets and other objects (including the International Space Station), give you more information about what you're seeing, and you can even go back in time, to see what the sky looked like in the past.
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Best iPad apps: Social Networking
App name: Tweetbot for Twitter (iPad edition)
Developer: Tapbots
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Tweetbot is an app designed to make Twitter as friendly as possible. It's got a clear, uncluttered interface, gesture controls for accessing information quickly and loads of great, original features, including being able to specify at what times you don't want notifications to disturb you. It can even sync your place in your timeline between it and its iPhone version.
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App name: Blogsy
Developer: Fomola
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
If you want to blog from your iPad, Blogsy is the app you want. It supports posting to WordPress, Blogger, Tumblr, Drupal, Joomla and loads more, and is packed with features. Add images from Flickr, Picasa and more, style text, write and edit HTML, post to multiple blogs, schedule posts, save local drafts, edit pages... for bloggers, this is the only tool necessary.
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App name: Find my Friends
Developer: Apple
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Find my Friends enables you to see your friends and family's locations, if they've given you permission. You can have it on all the time to make sure your kids are safe, or just for a small period, such as if you're trying to get a group to meet up. You can set location-based alerts too, so you'll know when someone arrives.
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App name: MyPad+ for Facebook, Instagram & Twitter
Developer: Loytr Inc
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
MyPad+ combines Twitter and Facebook in one app, enabling you to see your Facebook Messages, Twitter DMs and Mentions all in one place. It's also great for browsing the social networks, with a big clear news feed, gesture navigation, Facebook chat and Instagram support.
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App name: Skype for iPad
Developer: Skype
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
If you want to video chat with someone who isn't using an Apple device, Skype is the way to do it. Skype for iPad also supports voice calls and instant messaging, so you can communicate however you want. You can share photos from within the app, and it works over 3G and 4G, if your iPad supports it.
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Best iPad apps: Sports
App name: MLB.com At Bat
Developer: MLB Advanced Media
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
The MLB.com At Bat app offers news, analysis, scores and schedules for free, but with a premium subscription, you get access to a large archive of games and highlights from last season and before, including some classic games.
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App name: Coach's Eye
Developer: TechSmith Corporation
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Record yourself or someone else taking part in their sport, then play it back in slow motion and analyse it with Coach's Eye. You can go through frame-by-frame, or just play it back, and you can draw on the screen to point out highlights (or errors), and add an audio voiceover.
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App name: CoachNote
Developer: EXLUNCH
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Whether you're playing with the Champions League or with your pub team, it pays to know your tactics. CoachNote enables you to plan player positions and movement for a range of sports. You can animate 'plays' by moving players around, which can be recorded to play back or share elsewhere.
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App name: Sky Sports for iPad
Developer: BSkyB
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
For Sky Sports subscribers, Sky Sports for iPad is the ultimate companion app. Watch Sky Sports channels live, follow multiple matches at once in split-screen in the Champions League event centre, or get player profiles and live match stats while watching on a big screen. For F1 races, you get split-screen video, multiple camera angles, highlights and live race data.
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App name: My Football Pro HD
Developer: Supportware
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
My Football Pro HD is a comprehensive football app that offers data for 800 leagues across the world. Follow just about every team's scores live as the matches are played, with plenty of stats to mull over, and even get Push notifications if something happens to your team. Of course, you can choose favourite teams, so you get the most important information first.
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Best iPad apps: Travel
App name: Google Earth
Developer: Google Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Get the full power of Google's information about the world with the Google Earth app. It offers 3D cities, tours of famous places, layers of information - including roads, borders and more - and enables you to see photos from around the world. You can get a surprising amount of information about pretty much anywhere in the world, all with one free app.
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App name: TripAdvisor
Developer: TripAdviser
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
The internet has given everyone a voice, and people most use it to talk about what they like and don't like. Harnessed in apps like TripAdviser, that's a very good thing. Get information about everything from the quality of food in a restaurant to whether a hotel is good value, and find great things to do in places you've never been before. TripAdviser can really take the worry out of going to a new place.
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App name: National Parks by National Geographic
Developer: National Geographic Society
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
America has some the most beautiful national parks in the world, and the National Parks by National Geographic app is full of stunning photos of them, as well as lots of great information about what you find there. You can see maps with points of interest highlighted, get information about what activities there are to do, and what flora and fauna you'll find there, and personalise the app for the kinds of things you like to do.
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App name: Tube Map Pro
Developer: mxData Ltd
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
It pays to know exactly where you need to go on the London Underground long before you leave home. The Tube Map Pro app provides a Tube map, along with live updates for the quality of service on each of the lines, so you'll know in advance if there's going to be engineering delays. It can plan your routes for you as well, and tell you how long the journey should take.
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App name: Live Street View
Developer: Tim Broddin
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
Google Maps may have disappeared from the built-in Maps app, and taken Street View along with it, but you can get it back! This Live Street View app offers Google Street View for anywhere that it's available, just by tapping on the maps provided. On top of that, you can use its 'live' Street View function to have it act as a kind of augmented reality app, showing you the Street View for where you're currently pointing the iPad, so you'll know if you're in the right place.
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Best iPad apps: Utilities
App name: Find my iPhone
Developer: Apple
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Despite the name, Find my iPhone is more than capable of helping you find your iPad - though you can use it on your iPad to find your phone, if that's what you need. Tying into iCloud, it enables you to track the location of any of your devices (though the accuracy may depend on whether they have a GPS chip, or are connected to the internet). You can also use it to cause a misplaced device to make a loud sound, you can send a message to the device, or lock or wipe it completely, if you think you can't get it back.
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App name: Chrome
Developer: Google, Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Unfortunately, Google Chrome isn't as fast as Safari on iOS, but it does have a load of other features that make it worth a look, especially if you use it on the desktop. For a start, it can sync tabs and bookmarks with the desktop version, but it also offers a unified search/address bar, Google voice search, a clever home screen and some gesture controls, along with an easy-to-use Incognito mode.
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App name: 1Password Pro
Developer: AgileBits Inc
Price: £6.99
Link: Get from iTunes
1Password Pro enables you to keep your passwords and other sensitive information handy on your iPad, but protected. You can even use it to log into websites with a single tap, and it's all protected by high levels of encryption. It can sync with the iPhone, Mac and Windows version of 1Password, so you've got all your information everywhere you need it.
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App name: Air Display
Developer: Avatron Software
Price: £6.99
Link: Get from iTunes
If you often have your iPad docked near a desktop computer, why not use it as a second screen? That's what Air Display does, either mirroring or extended or Mac or Windows desktop onto the iPad. You can even use the touchscreen to control your computer, meaning that you could put, say, tool palettes in Photoshop on the iPad, leaving more space on your screen. For apps that have multiple windows, such as a movie editor, you could put your file browser on the iPad, leaving more space for editing.
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App name: Air Video
Developer: InMethod sro
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
iOS is only able to stream movies in iTunes from your computer over Wi-Fi, but Air Video can stream just about anything. Use it to access any video file on your desktop computer and watch it on your iPad. Even videos in formats the iPad doesn't support aren't a problem, because Air Video will transcode them on the fly, turning them into a suitable format as they're playing, provided you have a fast enough computer.
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Best iPad apps: Weather
App name: Magical Weather
Developer: Sophia Teutschler
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Magical Weather is an animated weather app that makes getting the temperature less boring. It looks beautiful, but more importantly, it presents all the information you need at a glance. See the weather for up to nine locations at once, or see hourly forecasts or seven-day forecasts.
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App name: Phases of the Moon
Developer: Fraser Cain
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
If you like a spot of moon-gazing, Phases of the Moon is a simple app that serves its one purpose brilliantly. It shows you the current phase of the moon with a big, stunning image and some extra information. Useful buttons enable you to look at how the moon will be on a particular date, and quickly see when the next full moon will be.
80 Best Free iPad Apps for 2013
1. AccuWeather for iPad
Annoyingly, some free iPad weather apps refuse to believe that the UK has any weather (or that the country exists), so AccuWeather gets props for merely working. Happily, AccuWeather also proves to be a decent – if quirky – weather app. The interface is odd (but fun) and there's a 'lifestyle' page that determines how your current local conditions might affect over 20 activities, including dog-walking and stargazing.
2. Facebook (universal)
The social networking giant has gone back-and-forth with its mobile apps, finally settling on this smart, native implementation. Much like the slightly simpler iPhone equivalent, Facebook on iPad is such that you won't want to use the comparatively clunky website again for seeing which of your friends really shouldn't have internet access after midnight.
3. Air Video Free (universal)
Despite naysayers whining about the iPad screen's 4:3 aspect ratio, it's a decent device for watching video, although it lacks storage for housing large video collections. Air Video enables you to stream video (converting it on-the-fly, if necessary) from your Mac or PC. The main limitation of the free version is that it only shows a few items (randomly selected) from each folder or playlist.
4. Beatwave (universal)
Beatwave is a simplified Tenori-On-style synth which enables you to rapidly build pleasing melodies by prodding a grid. Multiple layers and various instruments provide scope for complex compositions, and you can save sessions or, handily, store and share compositions via email. You can also buy more instruments via in-app purchases.
5. Bloomberg for iPad
It used to boast an eye-searing white-and-orange-on-black colour scheme that was a little like being repeatedly punched in the eyes, but now Bloomberg has grown up, discovered a palette (a subtler, serious 'things on black', for the most part), and has subsequently become a much more usable business news and stocks app.
6. Comics (universal)
On the iPhone, Comics is innovative, but zooming each panel and constantly rotating your device gets old fast. By contrast, the iPad's screen is big enough to display an entire page without the need to zoom or scroll. And with dozens of free comics available via the bundled store, comic book fans should lap this app up.
7. Dictionary.com - Dictionary & Thesaurus - For iPad
We approached Dictionary with scepticism, since most free dictionary apps are sluggish interfaces to websites. That's certainly what this looks like, but it works offline, providing speedy access to over two million words and definitions. The app's search is also reassuringly fast.
8. Dropbox (universal)
Dropbox is a great service for syncing documents across multiple devices. The iPad client works like the iPhone one (hardly surprising, since this is a universal app), enabling you to preview many file types and store those marked as favourites locally.
9. Evernote (universal)
Like Dropbox, Evernote (a free online service for saving ideas – text documents, images and web clips – that you can then access from multiple devices) works the same way on the iPad as it does on the iPhone. It benefits from the iPad's larger screen, which enables you to see and navigate your stored snippets more easily.
10. YouTube (universal)
When the YouTube app presumably became a victim of the ongoing and increasingly tedious Apple/Google spat, there were concerns Google wouldn't respond. Those turned out to be unfounded, because here's yet another bespoke, nicely designed Google-created app for iOS. The interface is specifically tuned for the iPad, and AirPlay enables you to fire videos at an Apple TV.
11. The Guardian Eyewitness
A showcase for engaging photography, The Guardian Eyewitness provides a daily, visual reflection of global events. You get access to the most recent 100 photos, which can be viewed full-screen or with a caption and 'pro tip'. You can also save photos to your iPad or share them via email.
12. iBooks (universal)
Going head-to-head with Kindle, iBooks is a decent ebook reader, backed by the iBookstore. As you'd expect from Apple, the interface is polished and usable, with handy cross-device bookmark syncing, highlighting, and various display options. It's also a capable PDF reader, for your digital magazine collection.
13. IM+ (universal)
Although the iPad enables a certain amount of basic multi-tasking, anyone who constantly juggles a number of instant messaging services will soon be tired of leaping between apps. IM+ is a good solution, enabling you to run a number of IM services in a single app, and there's also a built-in web browser for checking out links.
14. Kindle (universal)
Amazon's Kindle iPad app for reading myriad books available at the Kindle Store is a little workmanlike, and doesn't match the coherence of iBooks (you buy titles in Safari and 'sync' purchases via Kindle). However, Kindle's fine for reading, and you get options to optimise your experience (including the ability to kill the naff page-turn animation and amend the page background to a pleasant sepia tone).
15. Movies by Flixter (universal)
One for film buffs, Movies figures out where you are and tells you what's showing in your local cinemas – or you can pick a film and it'll tell you where and when it's on. The app is functionally identical on iPad and iPhone, but again the extra screen space improves the experience.
16. PaperDesk Lite for iPad
Effectively a souped-up digital notepad, PaperDesk Lite for iPad enables you to combine typed words, scribbles and audio recordings in user-defined notebooks. Be mindful, though, that this free version restricts you to three notebooks, each of which can only have three pages, and there are no export options.
17. PCalc Lite (universal)
PCalc Lite's existence means the lack of a built-in iPad calculator doesn't bother us (in fact, we'd love to replace the iPhone Calculator app with PCalc Lite as well). This app is usable and feature-rich – and if you end up wanting more, in-app purchases enable you to bolt on extras from the full PCalc.
18. Reuters News Pro for iPad
Spurious anti-competition complaints meant the BBC News app took a while to come to the UK; in the meantime, Reuters offered the next best free news app for iPad with its Reuters News Pro for iPad. It's a little US-centric, but can be skewed towards UK coverage via the Settings app, and it's worth downloading for a more international take on news coverage than BBC News provides.
19. Cooliris (universal)
Long ago, Cooliris lived within browsers, converting online galleries into 3D walls of thumbnails you could zoom along. On the iPad, the concept seems more at home. It's of course a gimmick, but it's a great-looking and tactile one, and more fun than using the Photos app to rummage through your snaps.
20. Wikipanion for iPad
The Wikipedia website works fine in Safari for iPad, but dedicated apps make navigating the site simpler and faster. We went back and forth between Simplepedia and Wikipanion, eventually plumping for the latter, largely due to its efficient two-pane landscape view with excellent bookmarking and history access.
21. eBay for iPad
Use eBay for iPad and you'll never touch eBay in a web browser again. It's fast and efficient, beautifully showcasing important details and images in its main results view. Gallery images can often be displayed almost at a full-screen size, which is particularly useful on an iPad with a Retina display. Speedy sorting options are also available.
22. Soundrop (universal)
Soundrop is a minimal generative sound toy that offers an endless stream of balls, which make noises when they collide with and bounce off user-drawn lines. The overall result is surprisingly fun and hypnotic. For more advanced features – save, multiple instruments and gravity adjustment – there's an in-app 'pro' purchase option.
23. Granimator
Wallpaper apps litter the App Store, but are mostly dull, offering photos of brick walls or bored animals. Granimator is a bonkers art tool, enabling you to choose a background and spray all manner of shapes around. Compositions can be fine-tuned by dragging objects, and then shared to Flickr, Twitter or your device's Photos app.
24. Google Earth (universal)
It's not the smoothest app in the world, and it lacks some elements from the desktop, but Google Earth is nonetheless a joy on the iPad. Touch gestures are an intuitive means of swooping around the planet, and the optional layers enable you to display as much or as little ancillary information as you wish.
25. Explore Flickr (universal)
Explore Flickr provides an engaging way to discover new photography. On launch, your iPad screen fills with a grid of thumbnails, drawn from Flickr.com's top daily images. Tap one to view (and, if rights permit, download to your device), or just leave the app lazily updating (every now and again, a thumbnail spins to reveal a new image) while your iPad charges in its dock.
26. Rj Voyager
One for budding iPad DJs, Rj Voyager enables you to choose from a selection of bundled tracks, turn parts on and off and edit parameters in real-time via an intuitive, futuristic interface. Play through headphones or a decent sound system and the result is infectious.
27. BBC News (universal)
Although the BBC News website works nicely on the iPad, BBC News is still worth downloading. Rather than trying to provide all of the news, it instead concentrates on the latest stories, with inline video. Categories can be rearranged, stories can be shared and the app's layout adjusts to portrait and landscape orientations.
28. Epicurious (universal)
Tens of thousands of recipes at your fingertips (as long as you have a web connection) ensure Epicurious is worth a download for the culinary-inclined. The app even composes a shopping list for recipes; it's just a pity it doesn't include measurements for those of us who use that new-fangled metric system.
29. WordPress (universal)
This official WordPress app has a reputation for being a bit clunky, but it's fine for authoring the odd blog post on the go, along with making quick edits to existing content and managing comments. It also offers both text-based and visual approaches to crafting posts, so you're not stuck with HTML.
30. Speedtest X HD (universal)
Truth be told, we're always a touch suspicious of apps that claim to test your connection speed, but Speedtest X HD seems to do a decent job. It's also handy to have installed for when your broadband goes all flaky and you need to record the figures for a subsequent moan at your ISP.
31. Adobe Photoshop Express (universal)
With people regularly moaning about bloat in Adobe's desktop applications, it's great to see the giant create something as focused and usable as Adobe Photoshop Express. Its toolset is strictly for basic edits (crop, straighten, rotate, flip, levels and lighting adjustments), and applying a few effects, but the app is fast, stable and extremely useable. Top marks.
32. App Shopper (universal)
Prices on the App Store go up and down like a yo-yo, and Apple's own wish-list mechanics leave a lot to be desired. You're better off using App Shopper, which lists bargain apps and also enables you to compile a wish-list and be notified when an item drops in price.
33. Find my iPhone (universal)
Find my iPhone would perhaps be better named 'Find my Apple stuff', because it's not just for figuring out where a missing iPhone is—it can also track iPads, iPods and Macs. The app is simple, elegant and, generally speaking, provides an accurate location for devices. It also enables you to remote-lock or wipe a device.
34. Flipboard (universal)
Initially, Flipboard looked like a gimmick, trying desperately to make online content resemble a magazine. But now it can integrate Flickr and other networks, beautifully laying out their articles, Flipboard's muscled into the 'essential' category – and it's still free.
35. Find My Friends (universal)
While perhaps less practical than on the iPhone, Find My Friends on the iPad nonetheless works well, enabling you to track any pals that are happy with you digitally stalking them. The iPad's large display improves the app's usability, simultaneously displaying your friend list and a map.
36. IMDB (universal)
IMDB might be a wee bit US-focused at times (much like the movie industry), but the app is a great way to browse more movie-related info than you could ever hope to consume in a single lifetime. Settings enable you to define which sites IMDB and Amazon info is taken from, and the show times finder works pretty well.
37. Pocket (universal)
Pocket and Instapaper have long battled it out for 'article scraper' king, but Pocket trumps its rival in appealing to iPad-owning cheapskates. Instapaper requires a purchase for iPad goodness, but Pocket is free. It's also very fast, offers tagging, includes a great original article/plain-text toggle, and has a vaguely Flipboard-like visual grid-based index.
38. TED (universal)
TED describes itself as "riveting talks by remarkable people, free to the world". The app pretty much does as you'd expect – you get quick access to dozens of inspiring videos. However, it goes the extra mile in enabling you to save any talk for offline viewing, and also for providing hints on what to watch next if you've enjoyed a particular talk.
39. Twitter (universal)
This app used to showcase some breathtaking iPad UI innovation, but in its quest for cross-platform consistency, Twitter has refashioned its tablet offering as a blown-up version of the iPhone app. The result is a far less exciting experience, but one that's nonetheless very usable, and which unlike third-party apps rolls in the service's Interactions and Discover tabs.
40. Virtuoso Piano Free 2 HD
There's not a great deal to piano app Virtuoso Piano Free 2 HD, but it's not bad for a freebie. You get a dual-keyboard set-up, with optional key labels, and you can shift octaves and notes by prodding arrows. A really nice touch is the 'duette' [sic] button, which creates a second, mirror image, keyboard, so that two people can play at once.
41. BBC iPlayer (universal)
BBC iPlayer is a must-have download for iPad users. The slick interface makes it easy to browse/watch recent shows and current broadcasts. You can also choose from two quality settings and toggle subtitles, and there's AirPlay support for an Apple TV. Recent updates also enable you to download shows to your iPad, so that you can watch them on the move.
42. Dolphin Browser
Safari for iPad is a great mobile browser, but if you hanker for more features, Dolphin is a decent alternative. The browser has an Opera-like 'speed dial' that provides one-touch access to favourites, and you can create personalised action gestures. There's also a distraction-free full-screen mode for when you really want to get into a website.
43. Skyscanner (universal)
Skyscanner's website is pretty good, but the iPad app's another great example of how an app's focus can really help you speed through a task. You use the app to search over a thousand airlines, and it provides straightforward competitive journey lists and comparison graphs. If you're planning a flight, it's an indispensable download.
44. Dragon Dictation (universal)
There's always something slightly spooky about voice recognition software, as if Skynet's listening in or something, but such tools had for years been out of most people's reach. Now, Dragon Dictation is free for iOS.
It's eerily accurate, trainable and, despite the dev recommending you use an external microphone, the app works fine with the iPad's built-in one. And unlike Siri, Dragon Dictation works on any iPad running iOS 4 or later, and it also has a bigger buffer than Apple's service.
45. Remote (universal)
Although pretty basic on the iPhone, Remote on the iPad is akin to a stripped-down iTunes when it comes to accessing network libraries and playing music. It's also indispensable if you have an Apple TV and want to control it with something other than the hateful metal chewing-gum stick that ships with the device.
46. Pulse News Reader
When unveiled, RSS reader Pulse was divisive, with an unresponsive oddball interface. But it's evolved to become free and fast, and is now a tactile, enjoyable way to catch up on news. The image-oriented interface, with slider-based RSS feeds (akin to those in the BBC News app) and configurable tab groups, makes it particularly suitable for anyone who subscribes to image-heavy sites.
47. Fotopedia Heritage (universal)
Rather like The Guardian Eyewitness, Fotopedia Heritage is perfect for anyone who enjoys awe-inspiring photography. The app enables you to browse tens of thousands of photos of beautiful locations worldwide. It also provides information about each location, and can be used for travel planning through favourites and links to TripAdvisor.
48. Yell Search
If you're in an unfamiliar place or travelling somewhere new, Yell Search is a great app for figuring out what amenities are available locally. The interface is responsive and efficient, and you can handily add any business you find as a favourite for easy access later on.
49. XE Currency for iPad (universal)
It's as ugly as they come, but XE Currency is the best free currency app you'll find. You define which currencies you want to see, along with the number of decimals to show. Double-tap a currency and you can set it as the base currency by tapping 1.0 in the calculator, or do bespoke conversions by typing any other value.
50. Airport Utility (universal)
With apps like Airport Utility, it's increasingly clear Apple now sees the iPad as an independent unit, not merely an accessory to a PC or Mac. The app provides an overview of your Wi-Fi network, and enables you to view and change settings, restore or restart a base station, and get terribly angry at a flashing orange light that denotes your ISP's gone belly up.
51. Skype for iPad
In theory, we should be cheerleading for FaceTime, what with it being built into iOS devices, but it's still an Apple-only system. Skype, however, is enjoyed by myriad users who haven't been bitten by the Apple bug, and it works very nicely on the iPad, including over 3G.
52. Skitch for iPad (universal)
Skitch is a screen-grab and annotation tool that was snapped up by Evernote. In its iPad incarnation, it enables you to scribble on grabs, photos, maps and web pages and then fling the result to Twitter, email or Evernote, or fire your work at an Apple TV.
53. Readability (universal)
The latest of the major read-it-later systems, Readability brings with it a clean interface and a lovely set of fonts. As with the likes of Instapaper, Readability strips junk from web pages, leaving only the content. As you'd expect, you can also send on anything particularly interesting to Twitter and Facebook.
54. iTunes U (universal)
If you're still convinced the iPad is only a device for staring brain-dead at TV shows and not a practical tool for education, check out iTunes U. The app enables you to access many thousands of free lectures and courses taught by universities and colleges, thereby learning far more than what bizarre schemes current soap characters are hatching.
55. 4oD Catch Up (universal)
Despite what we said in the previous entry, the iPad is, of course, a great tool for TV. (After all, once you're done studying, you need some downtime, right?) Channel 4's 4oD app enables you to view a selection of recent shows, along with a handful of classic programmes.
56. Google Search (universal)
Google Search might seem redundant - after all, the iPad's Safari app has a built-in Google search field. However, Google's own offering provides a superior search experience that's been specifically designed for iPad. Highlights include a tactile image carousel, visual search history and Google Goggles integration.
57. TuneIn Radio (universal)
Output your iPad's audio to an amp or a set of portable speakers, fire up TuneIn Radio, select a station and you've a set-up to beat any DAB radio. Along with inevitable social sharing, the app also provides an alarm, AirPlay support, pause and rewind, and a 'shake to switch station' feature - handy if the current DJ's annoying and you feel the need to vent.
58. TVCatchup Live TV (universal)
More TV! This time, it's the only partially inaccurately named TVCatchup Live TV; with it, you can watch TV for free, but it's not so much 'catch-up' as 'watch what's on now'. You get access to over 50 channels, although we're unsure about taking the developer's advice that you can "even watch TV in the bath" - iPads don't float.
59. Netflix (universal)
Netflix has been described by some in the UK as the perfect way to experience everything a DVD bargain bin has to offer. We do agree there's a lack of content compared to the US library, but Netflix is cheap and fine for catching up on older shows. And the iPad app includes AirPlay support and a resume function, so you can pick up where you left off on another device.
60. SoundCloud (universal)
SoundCloud is a popular service for sharing sounds, and the iPad app enables you to search and play myriad snippets and music tracks hosted on SoundCloud's servers. If you're a budding musician or oddball loudmouth, you can also record and upload sounds from your iPad, or record to upload later.
61. 30/30 (universal)
It's easy enough to ignore a to-do when it's lurking somewhere in the background on your Mac or PC, but on an iPad, 30/30's crystal-clear events (including optional repeating loops for work/break cycles) can't be so easily dismissed. Fortunately, it looks great and the tactile interface makes creating and removing items a joy.
62. Paper By FiftyThree
There's a certain train of thought that apps shouldn't ape real-world items, but we dismiss such talk. They just shouldn't ape real-world items badly! Paper by FiftyThree gets this right, with beautiful sketchbooks in which you can scribble, then share across the web. Books and the pen tool are free, and other tools are available via In-App Purchase.
63. Telegraph pictures for iPad
Rather like the Guardian Eyewitness app, Telegraph Pictures for iPad provides you with new imagery on a daily basis. In fact, The Telegraph's rather more generous than The Guardian, offering a dozen new photographs every 24 hours, and leaving a 14-day archive for you to explore at any time.
64. Sticky Notes for iPad
If you're a fan of sticky notes, but not the sticky nor the waste, Sticky Notes for iPad provides you with the means to bung colourful rectangular notes on your iPad's screen, even dictating the text should you wish. Just don't have someone think they can't get the note off and then attack your device with a scourer.
65. Architizer
There are two levels to this beautifully designed app directed at architects and anyone else with an interest in buildings. On entry, you can select projects from a grid that's updated in real-time. Photography can then be explored full-screen. However, you can also dig deeper, finding out more about each project and who designed it.
66. Pinterest (universal)
Social network Pinterest is one of the very few to challenge the big guns in the industry. It provides a means to find and share inspiration, working as a place to collect and organise the things you love. The iPad app has an elegant interface that pushes inspirational imagery to the fore, just as it should.
67. Cards (universal)
Yes, the cards that you can send from Cards cost four quid each, but the app itself is free, providing the means to experiment in making cards for your loved ones, based on your own images. Without spending anything, it's a fun toy; even when you send cards, it might work out cheaper than shop prices - and the images will be far more personal.
68. Quark DesignPad
One for the graphic designers out there, desktop publishing giant Quark's DesignPad is an astonishingly useful app for figuring out layouts on the move, or knocking about ideas in meetings. Plenty of ready-made documents can give you a head-start, and your finished work can be exported as a PNG or emailed for use in a QuarkXPress document.
69. Gmail (universal)
Because of its single-app nature and big screen, the iPad's become a tool many people prefer to a PC or Mac for email. However, if you're reliant on Gmail, Apple's own Mail is insufficient, not providing access to your entire archive nor Gmail's features. Google's own app deals with such shortcomings and looks as good as Apple's client.
70. Solar Walk: Saturn (universal)
Really, this is a promotional app for Solar Walk, but what a piece of promotion it is! There's a ton of information and interactive components that concentrate on perhaps the most fascinating of planets in our solar system, and it looks particularly impressive on a Retina iPad.
71. Netbot for App.net
App.net is a bit like Twitter, only it eschews adverts, has a subscription fee, and is hugely keen to attract (rather than repel) developers. Netbot is one of the finest clients for the service (having been created by the team responsible for the excellent Tweetbot, which it mirrors), and it's free.
72. Cloze (universal)
If you ever have one of those conversations where a friend swears blind they did reply, you say you didn't get the email, and they sheepishly mutter "on Facebook", Cloze is for you. It bungs all your social communications (email, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn) into a single inbox and also prioritises people who you most often deal with. It's a great time-saver.
73. Haiku Deck
If we're honest, we rather liked the original version of Haiku Deck, which stripped back presentations, only enabling you to add to each slide a single image, a heading and a sub-heading. The minimalism's gone (Haiku Deck now includes charts, graphs, bulleted lists and other 'improvements'), but it's still fun and easy to use, which is the main thing.
74. Tumblr (universal)
Tumblr has a perfectly serviceable mobile presence, but the Tumblr iPad app gives you a more tablet-oriented interface for using the site. It's therefore a cinch to manage your blogs, post new entries and reply to messages on your iPad. Additionally, there's also offline support, enabling you to queue posts, likes, replies and reblogs without a web connection.
75. Homestyler
In the professional world, Autodesk is best known for high-end 3D products: Maya, 3ds Max, AutoCAD. On the iPad, the company's been using its 3D smarts to churn out interesting consumer-focussed 3D tools. Homestyler enables you to photograph a room, then paint colours on the walls and add furniture, light fittings and accessories.
76. Podcasts (universal)
Podcasts was once one of those Apple apps that people looked at in disbelief, wondering whether anyone at the company had ever really used it. Now, it's a different beast: the interface is slick, and you can create custom stations that auto-update across iCloud, and on-the-go playlists with custom episode lists.
77. Calorie Counter HD
The iPhone version of Calorie Counter is a great way of ensuring you're not eating for several, but the HD iPad release takes things to a whole new level. The extra space enables the interface to breathe, providing plenty of room for charts, calorie breakdowns and interaction with fellow dieters.
78. Google Drive (universal)
It's curious to think how rapidly Microsoft made Office irrelevant to so many. Most people just want a simple app for documents and spreadsheets, and that (along with a storage repository) is precisely what Google Drive provides. Like Dropbox, it's also possible to store documents locally, for when you've no web connection.
79. Fotopedia Wild Friends (universal)
iPad displays have always been a fantastic way to explore photography (especially the newer Retina models). Fotopedia Wild Friends is one for nature lovers, packed with thousands of stunning images taken during hundreds of missions in dozens of countries. Being a conservation initiative, the photography's also backed with interactive maps, stories and information.
80. PlainText (universal)
The iPhone incarnation of PlainText is good for the odd bit of note-taking, but on the iPad PlainText is transformed into a minimal but highly usable writing tool with Dropbox sync. The lack of clutter provides a real sense of focus - even the single iAd is hidden from view once the on-screen keyboard appears.
http://www.techradar.com/news/mobile-computing/tablets/top-200-best-ipad-apps-2012-681998
Best iPad apps: Education
Here is just the first 80:
App name: Learnist
Developer: Grockit
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Learnist is kind of like Pinterest for education - you can use it to browse and create learning boards, with mix media and text from different sources to give you all the information you need. This app is a little weak when it comes to creating the learning boards, but it's easy to find boards on all sorts of topics, packed with information. It's a great way to find out about a new subject.
Best iPad apps: Education
App name: Learnist
Developer: Grockit
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Learnist is kind of like Pinterest for education - you can use it to browse and create learning boards, with mix media and text from different sources to give you all the information you need. This app is a little weak when it comes to creating the learning boards, but it's easy to find boards on all sorts of topics, packed with information. It's a great way to find out about a new subject.
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App name: iTunes U
Developer: Apple
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
iTunes U enables educational institutions to provide course notes and materials for students, including lecture recordings (whether that be audio or video). You can take notes while watching lectures and subscribe to the courses to make sure you don't miss anything. Even if you're not at university, you can use its free course to get learning about new topics!
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App name: Move the Turtle. Programming for kids
Developer: Next is Great
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Replicating the old educational idea of programming a 'turtle' to move around using the Logo programming language, the Move the Turtle app… well, does just that. This app offers a grounding in how software works, teaching your child to build commands and solve problems.
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App name: Little Digits
Developer: Cowly Owl Ltd
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
There are lots of counting and arithmetic apps on the App Store, but Little Digits is genius in its simplicity. The iPad can detect up to 10 touch inputs at a time, so this app tasks your child with placing the correct number of fingers on screen to match the numbers. It really helps kids to make the connection, and there are maths problems to keep them advancing.
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App name: DK The Human Body App
Developer: Dorling Kindersley Ltd
Price: £4.99
Link: Get from iTunes
DK has been doing a great job of bringing its considerable educational muscle to bear on the iPad, and DK The Human Body App is no exception. Full of detailed diagrams, huge amounts of information and even a rotatable 3D human body with layers you can toggle on and off, it really shows how interactive apps can enhance the way we learn.
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Best iPad apps: Entertainment
App name: Netflix
Developer: Netflix Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Netflix offers the best range of TV for £6 per month, even if its UK offering pales compared to what's available in the US. Still, you get multiple seasons of plenty of great shows, along with loads of films, both older and newer. Clever features such as tracking your place in shows across platforms make it a winner.
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App name: Lovefilm Player for iPad
Developer: Lovefilm
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Lovefilm (now owned by Amazon) has expanded out of being just a DVD rental company to offer streaming TV and films. Its TV content isn't up to Netflix's standards, but it often has flashier, newer films, and you can get its streaming-only service for just £5, for your Lovefilm Player for iPad app or other connected devices.
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App name: Sky Go
Developer: BSkyB
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
If you're a Sky subscriber, Sky Go is an essential download. Depending on your package, you can watch up to 32 live channels, including movies and sports, and Sky's on-demand catalogue. It even works over 3G, so you can watch the football just about anywhere.
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App name: BBC iPlayer
Developer: Media Application Technologies Ltd
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
The BBC led the way in on-demand content with the launch of its browser-based iPlayer, and this slick BBC iPlayer app streams a great range of high-quality video content to your iPad. Its custom interface is easy to browse, and you can now even download shows to watch offline while travelling. It also enables you to watch live TV.
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App name: zeebox
Developer: zeebox
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
This app takes the idea of the iPad as a second screen while watching TV to a new level. Zeebox wraps up information about the show you're watching with social streams, it's got information about viewer opinion and can even be used to control certain set-top boxes. It can even be something as mundane as a TV guide, if you're so inclined.
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App name: TVCatchup Live TV
Developer: GZero Ltd
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
You can turn you iPad into a TV with a hardware add-on such as the Tizi, but if you've got a decent internet connection, it's much easier to use this TVCatchup Live TV app. Using it, you can stream the Freeview channels directly to your iPad, with a now and next guide so you can see what's on. It's simple, but works brilliantly.
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Best iPad apps: Finance
App name: Account Tracker
Developer: Graham Haley
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Keep track of your spending and balance over multiple accounts with the useful Account Tracker app. It offers support for multiple currencies, enables you to set up alerts to warn if you're going to go overdrawn, enables you to search for transactions and export the information for sending out or analysing later.
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App name: Meter Readings
Developer: Graham Haley
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Meter Readings is a great way to avoid any nasty surprises when your gas or electricity bill comes. Use it to keep track of your household meters, and it'll show you usage patterns over time, estimate what the cost will be, and even enable you to check your bills by comparing its figures to what you're being charged. And yes, it'll remind you to take readings.
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Best iPad apps: Food & Drink
App name: Jamie's Recipes
Developer: Zolmo
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
The Jamie's Recipes app gives a bunch of recipes for free, but after that you'll have to buy 'packs' to see more content. They're well worth it, though, with easy-to-follow instructions, beautiful images and great search features. You can also add ingredients you need to a shopping list, synced to an iPhone.
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App name: Cooking Planit HD
Developer: Caelo Media LLC
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Most cooking apps assume a certain level of competency - especially if you're going to actually make the food in the time predicted. Cooking Planit HD is for complete beginners. It offers great features, such as being able to save meals (combinations of dishes), but the killer feature is its super-easy, step-by-step instructions. A timer on the screen helps you keep on top of cooking times, and tells you exactly what to do in what order to keep things going smoothly - no experience necessary.
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App name: Basil Smart Recipe Manager
Developer: Kyle Baxter
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Basil Smart Recipe Manager is a bit smarter than a standard recipe app. Instead of just being loaded with its own cooking ideas, it can search various cooking websites and turn its recipes into easy-to-follow instructions within the app. There's a large list of compatible sites, so you'll always be able to find something amazing to cook.
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App name: BBC Good Food
Developer: BBC Worldwide Ltd
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
This free BBC Good Food app comes with 20 recipes when you download it, but you can buy extra recipe packs to bulk out its options, and they're great value. Each one has nearly 200 new recipes in, and covers a different area, from healthy eating, to quick cooking and, of course, delicious cakes - among others.
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App name: toptable for iPad
Developer: OpenTable Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Sometimes, you don't want to cook. It's a good thing, then, that the world is packed with great places to eat. The toptable for iPad app enables you to make bookings at thousands of restaurants right from your iPad, either by searching or just browsing a map to see what's nearby. It also offers restaurant reviews and menus.
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Best iPad apps: Games
App name: Hero Academy
Developer: Robot Entertainment
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
This turn-based strategy game is perfect for mobile hardcore games. The aim is to defeat your opponent on a chess-like board using your team of fantasy heroes. Hero Academy's asynchronous play means that you can take your turn, wait for your opponent to go, then take your turn whenever you want. It all means it's pick-up-and-play, but it offers a huge amount of depth in how you can play it.
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App name: Bastion
Developer: Supergiant Games LLC and Warner Bros
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
This engrossing RPG tasks you with saving a destroyed civilisation, through beautifully designed broken worlds. Guided only by a mysterious narrator rivalling Morgan Freeman for gravitas and solemn intonation, you pick a range of weapons and fight hordes of enemies to restore the titular Bastion. It's a brilliant experience, with a choice of controls for the touchscreen.
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App name: Splice: Tree of Life
Developer: Cipher Prime Studios
Price: £2.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Splice: Tree of Life is an artistic puzzler that takes place in a microbial world. In each level, you have to reshape the structure you're given in a target number of moves (or 'splices'). It rewards forward planning, and isn't shy of giving you some extremely difficult puzzles to work with. It works perfectly on the iPad, and will steal hours from you.
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App name: Need for Speed: Most Wanted
Developer: Electronic Arts Inc
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Need for Speed: Most Wanted is a blistering arcade racer that puts you in various desirable cars, racing to beat your opponents and outrun the police. Drifting around corners, boosting with nitros and major crashes are the order of the day. As you progress and pick up points, you can combine them with the points you get from the console version to climb the leader boards. It looks great, handles brilliantly and is a huge amount of fun.
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App name: Jetpack Joyride
Developer: Halfbrick
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
If you've got a couple of minutes to spare, Jetpack Joyrideis the perfect game. It's an endless runner with simple controls - touch to go up, release to go down - but the addition of vehicles and gadgets mean no two runs are ever the same. It's a fast-paced reflex-tester, and it records your high scores on Game Center, so you can compete against your friends.
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App name: Letterpress
Developer: Atebits
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
A brutal game of word combat - in Letterpress, you have a grid of letters, and you take control of letters by using them in words. The aim is to have the most letters in your control when the board gets 100% taken. the strategy comes from the fact that you can't use words twice, and it's easy to take control of your opponent's letters. A turn-based battle of strategy and vocabulary, Letterpress is really easy to play, and you can try it for free.
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Best iPad apps: Health & Fitness
App name: runtastic PushUps PRO
Developer: runtastic
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
Runtastic PushUps PRO is designed to help push you develop your fitness and strength, enabling you to select training regimes, motivating you during workouts and storing information on how well you do each day. It's actually part of a range from runtastic, including sit up and squats, if you prefer.
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App name: iCircuit Training
Developer: Matt Burnett
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
The iCircuit Training app offers 18 pre-designed circuits, to get you doing different exercises that train every part of your body. You don't need equipment for any of them (though a bit of space might be wise). There are videos to show you how to perform the 50 different exercise types, and it keeps logs so you can track your progress.
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App name: Calorie Counter & Diet Tracker
Developer: MyFitnessPal LLC
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Keep track of how many calories you're consuming each day with the Calorie Counter & Diet Tracker app's huge database (over two million foods). Once you start seeing how much a chocolate bar will add to your daily total, you might think twice about it if you're trying to lose weight. Even if you're not, it can help you to keep a handle on how healthily you're eating.
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Best iPad apps: Lifestyle
App name: Amazon Windowshop
Developer: Amazon.com Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Amazon Windowshop presents you with a grid of items, making it easier than ever to flick through what's on offer. It's divided into columns of different product types, so you can quickly browse the bestsellers in any category. Select an item and you get all of the usual Amazon information, and you can buy right from in the app.
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App name: Louvre HD
Developer: Evolution Apps
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
Instead of a hefty coffee table book full of art, you can just fill your iPad with it. The Louvre HD app offers 770 of the Louvre's masterpieces to browse through, which can be searched by artist or time (and you can add your favourites). If you want to add an element of ambient class to proceedings, you can set it to show them as a slideshow (and it can even play classical music).
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App name: Day One Journal
Developer: Bloom Built LLC
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
If you want to keep a diary of your days, this is the best way to do it electronically. Day One syncs across your iPhone and iPad, so you have it with you everywhere. Write text entries, add photos and locations, tag entries so they can be found later and much more. Oh, and you can set a passcode lock for the app, so prying eyes don't get in.
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App name: eBay for iPad
Developer: eBay Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
With eBay having long since passed from virtual garage sale to virtual shopping mall filled with known selling brands, it's a more popular way than ever to buy things. The eBay for iPad app presents it all clearly and crisply - it's filled with photos and the items, with prices nice and prominent. You can customise its home screen with your favourite searches, too.
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App name: Cards
Developer: Apple
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Cards enables you create physical greetings cards to send out to people from your iOS device. You can order beautiful letterpress cards, customised with your photos and words. It grabs information directly from your phone, such as adding the names of places photographs were taken, and enabling you to choose who to send it to from your contacts. It'll even send you a notification on the day your card is due to arrive.
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Best iPad apps: Medical
App name: Gray's Anatomy Premium for iPad
Developer: Archibald Industries
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Gray's Anatomy turns the old medical tome into an interactive iPad extravaganza. It contains all the illustrations from Gray's Anatomy at high resolution, as well as 3D models. You can also search the app, create you own notes for illustration, save bookmarks and email information you want to share from the app.
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App name: Muscle & Bone Anatomy 3D
Developer: Real Bodywork
Price: £4.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Muscle & Bone Anatomy 3D is a reference app for the muscles and skeleton that features 3D models of the body with labels linking you through to more information. It also has the ability to group muscles into 'actions' and see how they combine to let you move in real life, and there are quizzes to test your knowledge.
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App name: Patient.co.uk
Developer: EGTON
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Nobody wants to come across as a hypochondriac, but it's still sensible to check your symptoms whenever you feel ill. The Patient.co.uk app offers a large database to search, with information on various diseases and conditions, as well as general health information. The information comes directly from GPs, and the app enables you to find local health services if you're in England.
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Best iPad apps: Music
App name: GarageBand
Developer: Apple
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
GarageBand really is music-making made easy. It enables you to play a collection of software instruments and record them to put together a song. for beginners, there are Smart Instruments, which simplify playing the instruments, while experienced musicians can plug in their own guitar or some MIDI instruments to record. You can then edit the track and send it out into the world.
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App name: Rdio
Developer: Rdio
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
The Rdio music-streaming service will set you back £9.99 per month for mobile access, but what that gets you is one of the most impressive libraries out there for streaming, great streaming 'radio' stations, offline listening and unlimited playlists. The Rdio appis really easy to use, too.
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App name: djay
Developer: algoriddim
Price: £13.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Further proving that the iPad can become just about anything if developers try hard enough, djay turns it into a pair of decks. Choose two tracks from your iTunes library, and get mixing. With mixer, tempo and EQ controls, automatic beat matching, cue point triggering and loads of other features, it's actually a surprisingly professional setup.
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App name: DM1 - The Drum Machine
Developer: Fingerlab
Price: £4.99
Link: Get from iTunes
This vintage drum machine app takes the kind of setup that might have set you back hundreds of pounds in the past and delivers it your iPad, for under a fiver. Packed with 86 drum kits, and filled with features for getting just the sound you want, electronic musicians will lose themselves in this DM1 app for hours at a time.
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App name: Equalizer Pro
Developer: Chun-Koo Park
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
If you want more control over how your music sounds on your iPad, Equalizer Pro is the app to get. Whether you just fancy tweaking the balance of a song, or whether you want to do it for everything to complement your headphones, this app gives you total control over your music's EQ. You can draw curves with an unlimited number of points, and see (and hear) the results immediately.
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Best iPad apps: Navigation
App name: TomTom UK & Ireland
Developer: TomTom
Price: £39.99
Link: Get from iTunes
A turn-by-turn navigation app like this is only really of full use on a 3G/4G iPad, due to its inclusion of a GPS chip, but even if you just have a Wi-Fi model, TomTom UK & Ireland's mapping is second to none, its instructions are clear and accurate, and you can opt to have live traffic data for a small extra fee.
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App name: Waze social GPS traffic & gas
Developer: Waze Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
If you don't want to pay £40 for TomTom's mapping service, Waze's community-driven approach is hard to beat. The Waze social GPS traffic & gas app will still get you safely around the country, and includes traffic information, along with road, hazard and police information, supplied by the community.
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App name: AA Parking
Developer: Parkopedia Ltd
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Trying to find a parking space can add a huge amount of time onto a journey if you don't know where to go. Do your research with the AA Parking app beforehand, though, and you'll know exactly where you need to end up. It could even save you money, by helping you find the cheapest (or free) car park.
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App name: CamerAlert
Developer: PocketGPSWorld.com Ltd
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Doing your research with CamerAlert could save you a bunch of money. It's able to show you the locations of speed cameras around the country, so you'll always know where the danger is. To keep its database up to date, you need to pay a subscription, but it's worth it to ensure that you don't get a hefty fine.
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App name: AA Time Machine
Developer: The Automobile Association Limited
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
AA Time Machine isn't really so much a navigation app as one for history buffs, but it's clever anyway. It enables you to buy maps from the past to overlay on today's maps, to see how things have changed. You can go from 1816 through to today, and see how areas have built up (or, indeed, disappeared) over time.
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Best iPad apps: News
App name: Instapaper
Developer: Marco Arment
Price: £2.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Instapaper is one of the iPad apps that absolutely everyone should own - once you've tried Instapaper, you'll wonder what you did before. It enables you to save articles you've found online to read later - it downloads the text and caches it offline. It means that if you spot something interesting and don't have time to read it, you can send it to Instapaper and eventually browse it whenever you're ready.
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App name: Reeder for iPad
Developer: Silvio Rizzi
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Reeder for iPad is a Google Reader client that presents your saved RSS feeds in a way that makes them incredibly easy to browse and leaf through. You skip through everything that's accumulated in a clear layout, and it's got loads of social and reading features, including sending articles to Instapaper.
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App name: Flipboard: Your Social News Magazine
Developer: Flipboard Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Starting out as a way to merge your social feeds with your RSS feeds, Flipboard has grown into a mini publishing platform in its own right. You can still use it to turn your Twitter, Flickr and Facebook feeds into mini magazines, effectively, but it also offers interesting articles through its 'Cover Stories' feature, and includes content from the New York Times and Rolling Stone.
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App name: BBC News
Developer: Media Applications Technologies Limited
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
If you want to make sure you're always up to date with what's happening in the world, BBC News is the app to get. It presents all of the BBC's online news stories in an easy-to-browse interface, complete with relevant video content. You can can personalise the app to highlight the topics that are most relevant to you, and watch the BBC News channel live at any time.
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App name: The Early Edition 2
Developer: Glasshouse Apps Pty Ltd
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
The idea of The Early Edition 2 is that you create a daily newspaper, just for you. You tell it where to get content from, using individual RSS feeds, or by linking it to your Google Reader account, and it pulls in all of the words and pictures and lays it out. Everything will be available offline, so you can still read it on the Tube.
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Best iPad apps: Photo & Video
App name: Camera+ for iPad
Developer: tap tap tap
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Camera+ is essential on iPhone, but it's also great on iPad, even if you don't take many photos with your tablet. It syncs with the Lightbox of Camera+ for iPhone, so any photos you take appear on it automatically. Then, you can apply all the edits you need on the larger screen, giving you more space to see what you're doing, and have more controls to hand.
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App name: iPhoto
Developer: Apple
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
iPhoto looks fairly simple, but it's full of surprisingly powerful tools. You can apply all sorts of filters and brushes, applying spot fixes and tweaks rather than having to make changes to your entire photo. It's all been heavily optimised for the touchscreen, and comes with great photo-sorting features, including creating 'journals'.
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App name: Adobe Photoshop Touch
Developer: Adobe Systems Inc
Price: £6.99
Link: Get from iTunes
It may not be the full desktop version of Photoshop, but Adobe's tablet version of its image-manipulation app is still mightily impressive. Adobe Photoshop Touch features lots of advanced tools, all tweaked for touchscreen control. You can still work in layers, and produce amazing final images. The tutorials are great, too, enabling anyone to learn to use it quickly.
Read: Adobe Photoshop Touch review
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App name: iMovie
Developer: Apple
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Apple's video-editing app offers intuitive gesture controls, making it easy to select clips, import them into your project, trim them, split them and move them around in the timeline. You can also add sound effects, record voiceovers and add soundtracks. iMovie also has the fun Trailers feature from the desktop version, guiding you through making a short, fun film.
iMovie for iPad: how to edit your videos quickly and easily
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App name: Luminance
Developer: Subsplash Inc
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
Luminance offers one of the simplest photo editing interfaces out there for beginners, but delve into it and you'll quickly find a huge range of sliders and options to tinker with, bringing the most out of your photos. It works in layers, so you can experiment with building up changes and easily go back to how it was before.
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Best iPad apps: Productivity
App name: Pages
Developer: Apple
Price: £6.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Pages isn't the app you'll reach for when you just need to type something simple, but it's unsurpassed for when you need to lay out something more complicated. It's easy to change the look of your document, change the flow of the text and drop in images - the words will flow about the pictures flawlessly. Font control is just a tap away, too, making this a great, simple publishing app.
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App name: Keynote
Developer: Apple
Price: £6.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Keynote is incredibly powerful not just as a presenting tool, but as a creation one. You can put together slideshows with all sorts of animation using its simple tools, with the Magic Move tool offering serious levels of customisation. And by hooking your iPad up to a projector (or using AirPlay), you can show your presentation on the big screen, while notes are displayed on your iPad.
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App name: Byword
Developer: Metaclassy, Lda
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Byword is designed to be a distraction-free writing environment, focusing you solely on what you need to write, whether that's a letter, a speech, or a list of the best apps for iPad. It offers word and character count tools, and extra keyboard buttons for commonly used punctuation. It can save your files to Dropbox or iCloud, and you can edit in Markdown for writing blog posts.
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App name: Things for iPad
Developer: Cultured Code
Price: £13.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Things is the ultimate task manager. It's not cheap, but it's incredibly powerful, enabling you to sync tasks across devices, manage the timing of your tasks, divide them up by category, tag them for filtering, add repeating tasks and due dates... if you need to keep on top of a lot of activities, there's no better way.
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App name: Evernote
Developer: Evernote
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Evernote is a mixture of note-taking, reminders and organisation. It enables you to add, well, just about anything as a note, that you can go back and review from any device, thanks to its cloud syncing. You can divide different areas of your life with Notebooks, and even add images of handwritten notes, which Evernote will scan and make searchable. To get the best out of it, you need a premium subscription, but it'll help you organise your life.
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App name: Agenda Calendar
Developer: savvy apps
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
Calendars need to give you lots of information at a glance, and Agenda Calendar is designed to be as slick and simple as possible. Supporting Google Calendars, iCloud and Microsoft Exchange through the default Calendar app's integration, it makes scheduling as easy as it can be. It also integrates with the iOS Reminders app, and you can use gestures to control your view quickly.
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App name: Dropbox
Developer: Dropbox
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Dropbox is one of the best cloud syncing and storage services, and its app is just as good. You're limited in what you can upload to it (just photos and videos from your Camera Roll), but you can access all of your files and folders. The app itself can view many files, but if there's something you want to open and edit in another app (such as opening a presentation in Keynote), you can just the Open With... command. Because of this, it's the perfect way to transfer files to your iPad.
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App name: Due - super fast reminder
Developer: Phocus LLP
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Apple's built-in Reminders app is good, but it lacks a few handy features that Due provides. Due makes it fast to add reminders, but it also puts loads of extra options just a tap away. You can set a reminder to recur, or to turn an audible alarm on or off, or you can delay a timer by 10 minutes, an hour or a day, all with just a single tap each - no need to go delving into menus. It makes it much easier to manage the little tasks you might otherwise forget.
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Best iPad apps: Reference
App name: Leonardo da Vinci: Anatomy
Developer: Touch Press LLP
Price: £9.99
Link: Get from iTunes
This collection of anatomical drawings by Leonardo da Vinci, from the Windsor Collection, enables you to get closer to these ancient drawings than you could ever hope normally. The drawings are presented in stunning detail, complete with notes (translated into English). In Leonardo da Vinci: Anatomy you can translate the mirror writing, see how closely the drawings match the real human body, and get insight into the works from the collection's curator.
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App name: Pyramids 3D
Developer: Touch Press LLP
Price: £9.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Pyramids 3D is a genuinely amazing app for history buffs. You can explore a 3D version of the Giza Plateau, and go into the tombs in full 3D environments, including into tunnels closed to the public in real life. All the tombs are presented with their hieroglyphics, and you can even see the paintings as they were when new. It's all guided by experts, and there are 3D models of many objects found within the tombs, including Tutankhamen's golden mask.
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App name: Atlas by Collins
Developer: Harper Collins Publishers Limited
Price: £4.99
Link: Get from iTunes
The Atlas by Collins app presents the Earth in different globe views, each one offering a huge amount of information and detail. There are physical maps, political maps, environmental ones and many others, including modern topics such as communications and energy. You can zoom down to street level, and explore hundreds of thousands of locations.
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App name: Brian Cox's Wonders of the Universe
Developer: Harper Collins Publishers Limited
Price: £3.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Brian Cox's Wonders of the Universe accompanies the BBC series of the same name, and goes well beyond what you can see in a TV series. There are videos and articles, sure, but you can also explore space, from the surface of Mars out to beyond the boundaries of our solar system.
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App name: Star Walk for iPad
Developer: Vito Technology Inc
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Star Walk for iPad is an augmented reality app that makes it easier than ever to know what you're looking at when you look up at the sky at night. It can track and pick out the constellations, point out planets and other objects (including the International Space Station), give you more information about what you're seeing, and you can even go back in time, to see what the sky looked like in the past.
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Best iPad apps: Social Networking
App name: Tweetbot for Twitter (iPad edition)
Developer: Tapbots
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Tweetbot is an app designed to make Twitter as friendly as possible. It's got a clear, uncluttered interface, gesture controls for accessing information quickly and loads of great, original features, including being able to specify at what times you don't want notifications to disturb you. It can even sync your place in your timeline between it and its iPhone version.
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App name: Blogsy
Developer: Fomola
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
If you want to blog from your iPad, Blogsy is the app you want. It supports posting to WordPress, Blogger, Tumblr, Drupal, Joomla and loads more, and is packed with features. Add images from Flickr, Picasa and more, style text, write and edit HTML, post to multiple blogs, schedule posts, save local drafts, edit pages... for bloggers, this is the only tool necessary.
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App name: Find my Friends
Developer: Apple
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Find my Friends enables you to see your friends and family's locations, if they've given you permission. You can have it on all the time to make sure your kids are safe, or just for a small period, such as if you're trying to get a group to meet up. You can set location-based alerts too, so you'll know when someone arrives.
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App name: MyPad+ for Facebook, Instagram & Twitter
Developer: Loytr Inc
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
MyPad+ combines Twitter and Facebook in one app, enabling you to see your Facebook Messages, Twitter DMs and Mentions all in one place. It's also great for browsing the social networks, with a big clear news feed, gesture navigation, Facebook chat and Instagram support.
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App name: Skype for iPad
Developer: Skype
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
If you want to video chat with someone who isn't using an Apple device, Skype is the way to do it. Skype for iPad also supports voice calls and instant messaging, so you can communicate however you want. You can share photos from within the app, and it works over 3G and 4G, if your iPad supports it.
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Best iPad apps: Sports
App name: MLB.com At Bat
Developer: MLB Advanced Media
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
The MLB.com At Bat app offers news, analysis, scores and schedules for free, but with a premium subscription, you get access to a large archive of games and highlights from last season and before, including some classic games.
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App name: Coach's Eye
Developer: TechSmith Corporation
Price: £2.99
Link: Get from iTunes
Record yourself or someone else taking part in their sport, then play it back in slow motion and analyse it with Coach's Eye. You can go through frame-by-frame, or just play it back, and you can draw on the screen to point out highlights (or errors), and add an audio voiceover.
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App name: CoachNote
Developer: EXLUNCH
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Whether you're playing with the Champions League or with your pub team, it pays to know your tactics. CoachNote enables you to plan player positions and movement for a range of sports. You can animate 'plays' by moving players around, which can be recorded to play back or share elsewhere.
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App name: Sky Sports for iPad
Developer: BSkyB
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
For Sky Sports subscribers, Sky Sports for iPad is the ultimate companion app. Watch Sky Sports channels live, follow multiple matches at once in split-screen in the Champions League event centre, or get player profiles and live match stats while watching on a big screen. For F1 races, you get split-screen video, multiple camera angles, highlights and live race data.
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App name: My Football Pro HD
Developer: Supportware
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
My Football Pro HD is a comprehensive football app that offers data for 800 leagues across the world. Follow just about every team's scores live as the matches are played, with plenty of stats to mull over, and even get Push notifications if something happens to your team. Of course, you can choose favourite teams, so you get the most important information first.
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Best iPad apps: Travel
App name: Google Earth
Developer: Google Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Get the full power of Google's information about the world with the Google Earth app. It offers 3D cities, tours of famous places, layers of information - including roads, borders and more - and enables you to see photos from around the world. You can get a surprising amount of information about pretty much anywhere in the world, all with one free app.
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App name: TripAdvisor
Developer: TripAdviser
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
The internet has given everyone a voice, and people most use it to talk about what they like and don't like. Harnessed in apps like TripAdviser, that's a very good thing. Get information about everything from the quality of food in a restaurant to whether a hotel is good value, and find great things to do in places you've never been before. TripAdviser can really take the worry out of going to a new place.
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App name: National Parks by National Geographic
Developer: National Geographic Society
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
America has some the most beautiful national parks in the world, and the National Parks by National Geographic app is full of stunning photos of them, as well as lots of great information about what you find there. You can see maps with points of interest highlighted, get information about what activities there are to do, and what flora and fauna you'll find there, and personalise the app for the kinds of things you like to do.
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App name: Tube Map Pro
Developer: mxData Ltd
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
It pays to know exactly where you need to go on the London Underground long before you leave home. The Tube Map Pro app provides a Tube map, along with live updates for the quality of service on each of the lines, so you'll know in advance if there's going to be engineering delays. It can plan your routes for you as well, and tell you how long the journey should take.
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App name: Live Street View
Developer: Tim Broddin
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
Google Maps may have disappeared from the built-in Maps app, and taken Street View along with it, but you can get it back! This Live Street View app offers Google Street View for anywhere that it's available, just by tapping on the maps provided. On top of that, you can use its 'live' Street View function to have it act as a kind of augmented reality app, showing you the Street View for where you're currently pointing the iPad, so you'll know if you're in the right place.
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Best iPad apps: Utilities
App name: Find my iPhone
Developer: Apple
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Despite the name, Find my iPhone is more than capable of helping you find your iPad - though you can use it on your iPad to find your phone, if that's what you need. Tying into iCloud, it enables you to track the location of any of your devices (though the accuracy may depend on whether they have a GPS chip, or are connected to the internet). You can also use it to cause a misplaced device to make a loud sound, you can send a message to the device, or lock or wipe it completely, if you think you can't get it back.
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App name: Chrome
Developer: Google, Inc
Price: Free
Link: Get from iTunes
Unfortunately, Google Chrome isn't as fast as Safari on iOS, but it does have a load of other features that make it worth a look, especially if you use it on the desktop. For a start, it can sync tabs and bookmarks with the desktop version, but it also offers a unified search/address bar, Google voice search, a clever home screen and some gesture controls, along with an easy-to-use Incognito mode.
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App name: 1Password Pro
Developer: AgileBits Inc
Price: £6.99
Link: Get from iTunes
1Password Pro enables you to keep your passwords and other sensitive information handy on your iPad, but protected. You can even use it to log into websites with a single tap, and it's all protected by high levels of encryption. It can sync with the iPhone, Mac and Windows version of 1Password, so you've got all your information everywhere you need it.
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App name: Air Display
Developer: Avatron Software
Price: £6.99
Link: Get from iTunes
If you often have your iPad docked near a desktop computer, why not use it as a second screen? That's what Air Display does, either mirroring or extended or Mac or Windows desktop onto the iPad. You can even use the touchscreen to control your computer, meaning that you could put, say, tool palettes in Photoshop on the iPad, leaving more space on your screen. For apps that have multiple windows, such as a movie editor, you could put your file browser on the iPad, leaving more space for editing.
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App name: Air Video
Developer: InMethod sro
Price: £1.99
Link: Get from iTunes
iOS is only able to stream movies in iTunes from your computer over Wi-Fi, but Air Video can stream just about anything. Use it to access any video file on your desktop computer and watch it on your iPad. Even videos in formats the iPad doesn't support aren't a problem, because Air Video will transcode them on the fly, turning them into a suitable format as they're playing, provided you have a fast enough computer.
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Best iPad apps: Weather
App name: Magical Weather
Developer: Sophia Teutschler
Price: £1.49
Link: Get from iTunes
Magical Weather is an animated weather app that makes getting the temperature less boring. It looks beautiful, but more importantly, it presents all the information you need at a glance. See the weather for up to nine locations at once, or see hourly forecasts or seven-day forecasts.
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App name: Phases of the Moon
Developer: Fraser Cain
Price: 69p
Link: Get from iTunes
If you like a spot of moon-gazing, Phases of the Moon is a simple app that serves its one purpose brilliantly. It shows you the current phase of the moon with a big, stunning image and some extra information. Useful buttons enable you to look at how the moon will be on a particular date, and quickly see when the next full moon will be.
80 Best Free iPad Apps for 2013
1. AccuWeather for iPad
Annoyingly, some free iPad weather apps refuse to believe that the UK has any weather (or that the country exists), so AccuWeather gets props for merely working. Happily, AccuWeather also proves to be a decent – if quirky – weather app. The interface is odd (but fun) and there's a 'lifestyle' page that determines how your current local conditions might affect over 20 activities, including dog-walking and stargazing.
2. Facebook (universal)
The social networking giant has gone back-and-forth with its mobile apps, finally settling on this smart, native implementation. Much like the slightly simpler iPhone equivalent, Facebook on iPad is such that you won't want to use the comparatively clunky website again for seeing which of your friends really shouldn't have internet access after midnight.
3. Air Video Free (universal)
Despite naysayers whining about the iPad screen's 4:3 aspect ratio, it's a decent device for watching video, although it lacks storage for housing large video collections. Air Video enables you to stream video (converting it on-the-fly, if necessary) from your Mac or PC. The main limitation of the free version is that it only shows a few items (randomly selected) from each folder or playlist.
4. Beatwave (universal)
Beatwave is a simplified Tenori-On-style synth which enables you to rapidly build pleasing melodies by prodding a grid. Multiple layers and various instruments provide scope for complex compositions, and you can save sessions or, handily, store and share compositions via email. You can also buy more instruments via in-app purchases.
5. Bloomberg for iPad
It used to boast an eye-searing white-and-orange-on-black colour scheme that was a little like being repeatedly punched in the eyes, but now Bloomberg has grown up, discovered a palette (a subtler, serious 'things on black', for the most part), and has subsequently become a much more usable business news and stocks app.
6. Comics (universal)
On the iPhone, Comics is innovative, but zooming each panel and constantly rotating your device gets old fast. By contrast, the iPad's screen is big enough to display an entire page without the need to zoom or scroll. And with dozens of free comics available via the bundled store, comic book fans should lap this app up.
7. Dictionary.com - Dictionary & Thesaurus - For iPad
We approached Dictionary with scepticism, since most free dictionary apps are sluggish interfaces to websites. That's certainly what this looks like, but it works offline, providing speedy access to over two million words and definitions. The app's search is also reassuringly fast.
8. Dropbox (universal)
Dropbox is a great service for syncing documents across multiple devices. The iPad client works like the iPhone one (hardly surprising, since this is a universal app), enabling you to preview many file types and store those marked as favourites locally.
9. Evernote (universal)
Like Dropbox, Evernote (a free online service for saving ideas – text documents, images and web clips – that you can then access from multiple devices) works the same way on the iPad as it does on the iPhone. It benefits from the iPad's larger screen, which enables you to see and navigate your stored snippets more easily.
10. YouTube (universal)
When the YouTube app presumably became a victim of the ongoing and increasingly tedious Apple/Google spat, there were concerns Google wouldn't respond. Those turned out to be unfounded, because here's yet another bespoke, nicely designed Google-created app for iOS. The interface is specifically tuned for the iPad, and AirPlay enables you to fire videos at an Apple TV.
11. The Guardian Eyewitness
A showcase for engaging photography, The Guardian Eyewitness provides a daily, visual reflection of global events. You get access to the most recent 100 photos, which can be viewed full-screen or with a caption and 'pro tip'. You can also save photos to your iPad or share them via email.
12. iBooks (universal)
Going head-to-head with Kindle, iBooks is a decent ebook reader, backed by the iBookstore. As you'd expect from Apple, the interface is polished and usable, with handy cross-device bookmark syncing, highlighting, and various display options. It's also a capable PDF reader, for your digital magazine collection.
13. IM+ (universal)
Although the iPad enables a certain amount of basic multi-tasking, anyone who constantly juggles a number of instant messaging services will soon be tired of leaping between apps. IM+ is a good solution, enabling you to run a number of IM services in a single app, and there's also a built-in web browser for checking out links.
14. Kindle (universal)
Amazon's Kindle iPad app for reading myriad books available at the Kindle Store is a little workmanlike, and doesn't match the coherence of iBooks (you buy titles in Safari and 'sync' purchases via Kindle). However, Kindle's fine for reading, and you get options to optimise your experience (including the ability to kill the naff page-turn animation and amend the page background to a pleasant sepia tone).
15. Movies by Flixter (universal)
One for film buffs, Movies figures out where you are and tells you what's showing in your local cinemas – or you can pick a film and it'll tell you where and when it's on. The app is functionally identical on iPad and iPhone, but again the extra screen space improves the experience.
16. PaperDesk Lite for iPad
Effectively a souped-up digital notepad, PaperDesk Lite for iPad enables you to combine typed words, scribbles and audio recordings in user-defined notebooks. Be mindful, though, that this free version restricts you to three notebooks, each of which can only have three pages, and there are no export options.
17. PCalc Lite (universal)
PCalc Lite's existence means the lack of a built-in iPad calculator doesn't bother us (in fact, we'd love to replace the iPhone Calculator app with PCalc Lite as well). This app is usable and feature-rich – and if you end up wanting more, in-app purchases enable you to bolt on extras from the full PCalc.
18. Reuters News Pro for iPad
Spurious anti-competition complaints meant the BBC News app took a while to come to the UK; in the meantime, Reuters offered the next best free news app for iPad with its Reuters News Pro for iPad. It's a little US-centric, but can be skewed towards UK coverage via the Settings app, and it's worth downloading for a more international take on news coverage than BBC News provides.
19. Cooliris (universal)
Long ago, Cooliris lived within browsers, converting online galleries into 3D walls of thumbnails you could zoom along. On the iPad, the concept seems more at home. It's of course a gimmick, but it's a great-looking and tactile one, and more fun than using the Photos app to rummage through your snaps.
20. Wikipanion for iPad
The Wikipedia website works fine in Safari for iPad, but dedicated apps make navigating the site simpler and faster. We went back and forth between Simplepedia and Wikipanion, eventually plumping for the latter, largely due to its efficient two-pane landscape view with excellent bookmarking and history access.
21. eBay for iPad
Use eBay for iPad and you'll never touch eBay in a web browser again. It's fast and efficient, beautifully showcasing important details and images in its main results view. Gallery images can often be displayed almost at a full-screen size, which is particularly useful on an iPad with a Retina display. Speedy sorting options are also available.
22. Soundrop (universal)
Soundrop is a minimal generative sound toy that offers an endless stream of balls, which make noises when they collide with and bounce off user-drawn lines. The overall result is surprisingly fun and hypnotic. For more advanced features – save, multiple instruments and gravity adjustment – there's an in-app 'pro' purchase option.
23. Granimator
Wallpaper apps litter the App Store, but are mostly dull, offering photos of brick walls or bored animals. Granimator is a bonkers art tool, enabling you to choose a background and spray all manner of shapes around. Compositions can be fine-tuned by dragging objects, and then shared to Flickr, Twitter or your device's Photos app.
24. Google Earth (universal)
It's not the smoothest app in the world, and it lacks some elements from the desktop, but Google Earth is nonetheless a joy on the iPad. Touch gestures are an intuitive means of swooping around the planet, and the optional layers enable you to display as much or as little ancillary information as you wish.
25. Explore Flickr (universal)
Explore Flickr provides an engaging way to discover new photography. On launch, your iPad screen fills with a grid of thumbnails, drawn from Flickr.com's top daily images. Tap one to view (and, if rights permit, download to your device), or just leave the app lazily updating (every now and again, a thumbnail spins to reveal a new image) while your iPad charges in its dock.
26. Rj Voyager
One for budding iPad DJs, Rj Voyager enables you to choose from a selection of bundled tracks, turn parts on and off and edit parameters in real-time via an intuitive, futuristic interface. Play through headphones or a decent sound system and the result is infectious.
27. BBC News (universal)
Although the BBC News website works nicely on the iPad, BBC News is still worth downloading. Rather than trying to provide all of the news, it instead concentrates on the latest stories, with inline video. Categories can be rearranged, stories can be shared and the app's layout adjusts to portrait and landscape orientations.
28. Epicurious (universal)
Tens of thousands of recipes at your fingertips (as long as you have a web connection) ensure Epicurious is worth a download for the culinary-inclined. The app even composes a shopping list for recipes; it's just a pity it doesn't include measurements for those of us who use that new-fangled metric system.
29. WordPress (universal)
This official WordPress app has a reputation for being a bit clunky, but it's fine for authoring the odd blog post on the go, along with making quick edits to existing content and managing comments. It also offers both text-based and visual approaches to crafting posts, so you're not stuck with HTML.
30. Speedtest X HD (universal)
Truth be told, we're always a touch suspicious of apps that claim to test your connection speed, but Speedtest X HD seems to do a decent job. It's also handy to have installed for when your broadband goes all flaky and you need to record the figures for a subsequent moan at your ISP.
31. Adobe Photoshop Express (universal)
With people regularly moaning about bloat in Adobe's desktop applications, it's great to see the giant create something as focused and usable as Adobe Photoshop Express. Its toolset is strictly for basic edits (crop, straighten, rotate, flip, levels and lighting adjustments), and applying a few effects, but the app is fast, stable and extremely useable. Top marks.
32. App Shopper (universal)
Prices on the App Store go up and down like a yo-yo, and Apple's own wish-list mechanics leave a lot to be desired. You're better off using App Shopper, which lists bargain apps and also enables you to compile a wish-list and be notified when an item drops in price.
33. Find my iPhone (universal)
Find my iPhone would perhaps be better named 'Find my Apple stuff', because it's not just for figuring out where a missing iPhone is—it can also track iPads, iPods and Macs. The app is simple, elegant and, generally speaking, provides an accurate location for devices. It also enables you to remote-lock or wipe a device.
34. Flipboard (universal)
Initially, Flipboard looked like a gimmick, trying desperately to make online content resemble a magazine. But now it can integrate Flickr and other networks, beautifully laying out their articles, Flipboard's muscled into the 'essential' category – and it's still free.
35. Find My Friends (universal)
While perhaps less practical than on the iPhone, Find My Friends on the iPad nonetheless works well, enabling you to track any pals that are happy with you digitally stalking them. The iPad's large display improves the app's usability, simultaneously displaying your friend list and a map.
36. IMDB (universal)
IMDB might be a wee bit US-focused at times (much like the movie industry), but the app is a great way to browse more movie-related info than you could ever hope to consume in a single lifetime. Settings enable you to define which sites IMDB and Amazon info is taken from, and the show times finder works pretty well.
37. Pocket (universal)
Pocket and Instapaper have long battled it out for 'article scraper' king, but Pocket trumps its rival in appealing to iPad-owning cheapskates. Instapaper requires a purchase for iPad goodness, but Pocket is free. It's also very fast, offers tagging, includes a great original article/plain-text toggle, and has a vaguely Flipboard-like visual grid-based index.
38. TED (universal)
TED describes itself as "riveting talks by remarkable people, free to the world". The app pretty much does as you'd expect – you get quick access to dozens of inspiring videos. However, it goes the extra mile in enabling you to save any talk for offline viewing, and also for providing hints on what to watch next if you've enjoyed a particular talk.
39. Twitter (universal)
This app used to showcase some breathtaking iPad UI innovation, but in its quest for cross-platform consistency, Twitter has refashioned its tablet offering as a blown-up version of the iPhone app. The result is a far less exciting experience, but one that's nonetheless very usable, and which unlike third-party apps rolls in the service's Interactions and Discover tabs.
40. Virtuoso Piano Free 2 HD
There's not a great deal to piano app Virtuoso Piano Free 2 HD, but it's not bad for a freebie. You get a dual-keyboard set-up, with optional key labels, and you can shift octaves and notes by prodding arrows. A really nice touch is the 'duette' [sic] button, which creates a second, mirror image, keyboard, so that two people can play at once.
41. BBC iPlayer (universal)
BBC iPlayer is a must-have download for iPad users. The slick interface makes it easy to browse/watch recent shows and current broadcasts. You can also choose from two quality settings and toggle subtitles, and there's AirPlay support for an Apple TV. Recent updates also enable you to download shows to your iPad, so that you can watch them on the move.
42. Dolphin Browser
Safari for iPad is a great mobile browser, but if you hanker for more features, Dolphin is a decent alternative. The browser has an Opera-like 'speed dial' that provides one-touch access to favourites, and you can create personalised action gestures. There's also a distraction-free full-screen mode for when you really want to get into a website.
43. Skyscanner (universal)
Skyscanner's website is pretty good, but the iPad app's another great example of how an app's focus can really help you speed through a task. You use the app to search over a thousand airlines, and it provides straightforward competitive journey lists and comparison graphs. If you're planning a flight, it's an indispensable download.
44. Dragon Dictation (universal)
There's always something slightly spooky about voice recognition software, as if Skynet's listening in or something, but such tools had for years been out of most people's reach. Now, Dragon Dictation is free for iOS.
It's eerily accurate, trainable and, despite the dev recommending you use an external microphone, the app works fine with the iPad's built-in one. And unlike Siri, Dragon Dictation works on any iPad running iOS 4 or later, and it also has a bigger buffer than Apple's service.
45. Remote (universal)
Although pretty basic on the iPhone, Remote on the iPad is akin to a stripped-down iTunes when it comes to accessing network libraries and playing music. It's also indispensable if you have an Apple TV and want to control it with something other than the hateful metal chewing-gum stick that ships with the device.
46. Pulse News Reader
When unveiled, RSS reader Pulse was divisive, with an unresponsive oddball interface. But it's evolved to become free and fast, and is now a tactile, enjoyable way to catch up on news. The image-oriented interface, with slider-based RSS feeds (akin to those in the BBC News app) and configurable tab groups, makes it particularly suitable for anyone who subscribes to image-heavy sites.
47. Fotopedia Heritage (universal)
Rather like The Guardian Eyewitness, Fotopedia Heritage is perfect for anyone who enjoys awe-inspiring photography. The app enables you to browse tens of thousands of photos of beautiful locations worldwide. It also provides information about each location, and can be used for travel planning through favourites and links to TripAdvisor.
48. Yell Search
If you're in an unfamiliar place or travelling somewhere new, Yell Search is a great app for figuring out what amenities are available locally. The interface is responsive and efficient, and you can handily add any business you find as a favourite for easy access later on.
49. XE Currency for iPad (universal)
It's as ugly as they come, but XE Currency is the best free currency app you'll find. You define which currencies you want to see, along with the number of decimals to show. Double-tap a currency and you can set it as the base currency by tapping 1.0 in the calculator, or do bespoke conversions by typing any other value.
50. Airport Utility (universal)
With apps like Airport Utility, it's increasingly clear Apple now sees the iPad as an independent unit, not merely an accessory to a PC or Mac. The app provides an overview of your Wi-Fi network, and enables you to view and change settings, restore or restart a base station, and get terribly angry at a flashing orange light that denotes your ISP's gone belly up.
51. Skype for iPad
In theory, we should be cheerleading for FaceTime, what with it being built into iOS devices, but it's still an Apple-only system. Skype, however, is enjoyed by myriad users who haven't been bitten by the Apple bug, and it works very nicely on the iPad, including over 3G.
52. Skitch for iPad (universal)
Skitch is a screen-grab and annotation tool that was snapped up by Evernote. In its iPad incarnation, it enables you to scribble on grabs, photos, maps and web pages and then fling the result to Twitter, email or Evernote, or fire your work at an Apple TV.
53. Readability (universal)
The latest of the major read-it-later systems, Readability brings with it a clean interface and a lovely set of fonts. As with the likes of Instapaper, Readability strips junk from web pages, leaving only the content. As you'd expect, you can also send on anything particularly interesting to Twitter and Facebook.
54. iTunes U (universal)
If you're still convinced the iPad is only a device for staring brain-dead at TV shows and not a practical tool for education, check out iTunes U. The app enables you to access many thousands of free lectures and courses taught by universities and colleges, thereby learning far more than what bizarre schemes current soap characters are hatching.
55. 4oD Catch Up (universal)
Despite what we said in the previous entry, the iPad is, of course, a great tool for TV. (After all, once you're done studying, you need some downtime, right?) Channel 4's 4oD app enables you to view a selection of recent shows, along with a handful of classic programmes.
56. Google Search (universal)
Google Search might seem redundant - after all, the iPad's Safari app has a built-in Google search field. However, Google's own offering provides a superior search experience that's been specifically designed for iPad. Highlights include a tactile image carousel, visual search history and Google Goggles integration.
57. TuneIn Radio (universal)
Output your iPad's audio to an amp or a set of portable speakers, fire up TuneIn Radio, select a station and you've a set-up to beat any DAB radio. Along with inevitable social sharing, the app also provides an alarm, AirPlay support, pause and rewind, and a 'shake to switch station' feature - handy if the current DJ's annoying and you feel the need to vent.
58. TVCatchup Live TV (universal)
More TV! This time, it's the only partially inaccurately named TVCatchup Live TV; with it, you can watch TV for free, but it's not so much 'catch-up' as 'watch what's on now'. You get access to over 50 channels, although we're unsure about taking the developer's advice that you can "even watch TV in the bath" - iPads don't float.
59. Netflix (universal)
Netflix has been described by some in the UK as the perfect way to experience everything a DVD bargain bin has to offer. We do agree there's a lack of content compared to the US library, but Netflix is cheap and fine for catching up on older shows. And the iPad app includes AirPlay support and a resume function, so you can pick up where you left off on another device.
60. SoundCloud (universal)
SoundCloud is a popular service for sharing sounds, and the iPad app enables you to search and play myriad snippets and music tracks hosted on SoundCloud's servers. If you're a budding musician or oddball loudmouth, you can also record and upload sounds from your iPad, or record to upload later.
61. 30/30 (universal)
It's easy enough to ignore a to-do when it's lurking somewhere in the background on your Mac or PC, but on an iPad, 30/30's crystal-clear events (including optional repeating loops for work/break cycles) can't be so easily dismissed. Fortunately, it looks great and the tactile interface makes creating and removing items a joy.
62. Paper By FiftyThree
There's a certain train of thought that apps shouldn't ape real-world items, but we dismiss such talk. They just shouldn't ape real-world items badly! Paper by FiftyThree gets this right, with beautiful sketchbooks in which you can scribble, then share across the web. Books and the pen tool are free, and other tools are available via In-App Purchase.
63. Telegraph pictures for iPad
Rather like the Guardian Eyewitness app, Telegraph Pictures for iPad provides you with new imagery on a daily basis. In fact, The Telegraph's rather more generous than The Guardian, offering a dozen new photographs every 24 hours, and leaving a 14-day archive for you to explore at any time.
64. Sticky Notes for iPad
If you're a fan of sticky notes, but not the sticky nor the waste, Sticky Notes for iPad provides you with the means to bung colourful rectangular notes on your iPad's screen, even dictating the text should you wish. Just don't have someone think they can't get the note off and then attack your device with a scourer.
65. Architizer
There are two levels to this beautifully designed app directed at architects and anyone else with an interest in buildings. On entry, you can select projects from a grid that's updated in real-time. Photography can then be explored full-screen. However, you can also dig deeper, finding out more about each project and who designed it.
66. Pinterest (universal)
Social network Pinterest is one of the very few to challenge the big guns in the industry. It provides a means to find and share inspiration, working as a place to collect and organise the things you love. The iPad app has an elegant interface that pushes inspirational imagery to the fore, just as it should.
67. Cards (universal)
Yes, the cards that you can send from Cards cost four quid each, but the app itself is free, providing the means to experiment in making cards for your loved ones, based on your own images. Without spending anything, it's a fun toy; even when you send cards, it might work out cheaper than shop prices - and the images will be far more personal.
68. Quark DesignPad
One for the graphic designers out there, desktop publishing giant Quark's DesignPad is an astonishingly useful app for figuring out layouts on the move, or knocking about ideas in meetings. Plenty of ready-made documents can give you a head-start, and your finished work can be exported as a PNG or emailed for use in a QuarkXPress document.
69. Gmail (universal)
Because of its single-app nature and big screen, the iPad's become a tool many people prefer to a PC or Mac for email. However, if you're reliant on Gmail, Apple's own Mail is insufficient, not providing access to your entire archive nor Gmail's features. Google's own app deals with such shortcomings and looks as good as Apple's client.
70. Solar Walk: Saturn (universal)
Really, this is a promotional app for Solar Walk, but what a piece of promotion it is! There's a ton of information and interactive components that concentrate on perhaps the most fascinating of planets in our solar system, and it looks particularly impressive on a Retina iPad.
71. Netbot for App.net
App.net is a bit like Twitter, only it eschews adverts, has a subscription fee, and is hugely keen to attract (rather than repel) developers. Netbot is one of the finest clients for the service (having been created by the team responsible for the excellent Tweetbot, which it mirrors), and it's free.
72. Cloze (universal)
If you ever have one of those conversations where a friend swears blind they did reply, you say you didn't get the email, and they sheepishly mutter "on Facebook", Cloze is for you. It bungs all your social communications (email, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn) into a single inbox and also prioritises people who you most often deal with. It's a great time-saver.
73. Haiku Deck
If we're honest, we rather liked the original version of Haiku Deck, which stripped back presentations, only enabling you to add to each slide a single image, a heading and a sub-heading. The minimalism's gone (Haiku Deck now includes charts, graphs, bulleted lists and other 'improvements'), but it's still fun and easy to use, which is the main thing.
74. Tumblr (universal)
Tumblr has a perfectly serviceable mobile presence, but the Tumblr iPad app gives you a more tablet-oriented interface for using the site. It's therefore a cinch to manage your blogs, post new entries and reply to messages on your iPad. Additionally, there's also offline support, enabling you to queue posts, likes, replies and reblogs without a web connection.
75. Homestyler
In the professional world, Autodesk is best known for high-end 3D products: Maya, 3ds Max, AutoCAD. On the iPad, the company's been using its 3D smarts to churn out interesting consumer-focussed 3D tools. Homestyler enables you to photograph a room, then paint colours on the walls and add furniture, light fittings and accessories.
76. Podcasts (universal)
Podcasts was once one of those Apple apps that people looked at in disbelief, wondering whether anyone at the company had ever really used it. Now, it's a different beast: the interface is slick, and you can create custom stations that auto-update across iCloud, and on-the-go playlists with custom episode lists.
77. Calorie Counter HD
The iPhone version of Calorie Counter is a great way of ensuring you're not eating for several, but the HD iPad release takes things to a whole new level. The extra space enables the interface to breathe, providing plenty of room for charts, calorie breakdowns and interaction with fellow dieters.
78. Google Drive (universal)
It's curious to think how rapidly Microsoft made Office irrelevant to so many. Most people just want a simple app for documents and spreadsheets, and that (along with a storage repository) is precisely what Google Drive provides. Like Dropbox, it's also possible to store documents locally, for when you've no web connection.
79. Fotopedia Wild Friends (universal)
iPad displays have always been a fantastic way to explore photography (especially the newer Retina models). Fotopedia Wild Friends is one for nature lovers, packed with thousands of stunning images taken during hundreds of missions in dozens of countries. Being a conservation initiative, the photography's also backed with interactive maps, stories and information.
80. PlainText (universal)
The iPhone incarnation of PlainText is good for the odd bit of note-taking, but on the iPad PlainText is transformed into a minimal but highly usable writing tool with Dropbox sync. The lack of clutter provides a real sense of focus - even the single iAd is hidden from view once the on-screen keyboard appears.