These are the 6 most useful Google apps you aren’t using—yet

If you’re like most people, you probably use at least a handful of Google services every day—maybe without even thinking about it. But while the company has plenty of high-profile offerings, there are still more Google goodies that are unknown, undermarketed, or underappreciated. Here are some to check out. Family Link If you’ve got kids in the house, sometimes it’s nice to set some ground rules. Google’s Family Link app lets you do just that, by providing reports about which apps they’ve been using. It also gives you the ability to approve or deny new apps they try to download—or hide certain apps completely.

There are also curated, teacher-approved apps that you can add to their devices remotely, functionality to limit screen time, and location tracking so you can keep an eye on your kiddos from afar. The app is for kids using Android devices and Chromebooks, but parents can also manage everything from an iPhone. Tasks There’s a fine line between too-simple and too-complicated to-do lists, and it’s one Google manages to walk pretty well. Google Tasks for iOS and Android is a more-than-serviceable to-do list manager on its own, but it’s the integration with Gmail and Calendar that make it a no-brainer if you use those services as well.

You use it as a standard to-do list to capture, update, and check off tasks but the integration means you can also finesse your lists from right inside Gmail and create and view tasks from Calendar as well. Everything’s always synchronized, no matter how you like to manage your tasks. Arts & Culture Travel’s been tough lately, but you can kinda-sorta almost feel like you’re there with online tours of famous museums thanks to Google’s Arts & Culture. It features more than 2,000 museums to explore, more than 100,000 works of art, and daily-rotating art topics to learn about. There’s even a games section with virtual coloring books, crosswords, and other puzzles if you’re looking for a little fun.

Also be sure to check out the very-cool Expeditions section, which feels like a service unto itself. It’s filled with virtual field trips spanning a ton of different interesting subjects. YouTube Kids With all the streaming services we pay for in the Aamoth household, my kids invariably spend most of their time looking for stuff on YouTube. But guess what? Not all of YouTube is appropriate for children. Thankfully, there’s Youtube Kids, which is pretty much just like it sounds: a kid-friendly version of YouTube for children up to age 12.

When you first sign in as a parent, you’re taken on a little tour and then you’ll create profiles for each of your kids, at which point you can choose to grant them access to videos in the 0-to-4, 5-to-8, or 9-to-12 age ranges. Then on your kids’ devices, download the YouTube kids apps (iOS here, Android here) or just access the site from a web browser. You’ll choose who’s watching, and the content that you’ve deemed appropriate for them will be all they’ll be able to watch. PhotoScan Let me guess: You’ve been meaning to scan that old shoebox full of photos, right? You’ll get to it any day now (you’ve been saying it for years). With Google’s excellent PhotoScan app, you a) don’t have too much of an excuse, and b) don’t need any complicated or expensive scanning equipment.

You simply use your phone to snap a picture of a picture—What a time to be alive!—and PhotoScan will intelligently detect the borders of the original photo, straighten it out, brush it up, and upload it to your Google Photos account for safekeeping. Check out my editor Harry’s hands-on with PhotoScan to get a better idea of how it works. Chrome Remote Desktop If you need to quickly and easily control one computer from another computer—again: What a time to be alive!—then look no further than Chrome Remote Desktop, a free tool that’s a godsend if you have faraway family members who’ve made you their personal IT guru.

If someone needs help, you can send them to the Remote Desktop site, where they can click the “Share my screen” button. They’ll then get a code they can share with you; you enter the code on your end, and a quick whiff of ozone later, you’re remotely controlling their machine. You can also leave it running full time on your own many machines, letting you manage them each remotely from your main computer without breaking a sweat.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90687757/these-are-the-6-most-useful-google-apps-you-arent-using-yet?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Erstellt 4y | 28.10.2021, 15:21:21


Melden Sie sich an, um einen Kommentar hinzuzufügen

Andere Beiträge in dieser Gruppe

‘Eating like a medieval peasant’: TikTok is eating up recession-era dining tips

“If this is your first time being poor, I’m Kiki, and I’m trying to make it affordable to eat by using depression, recession, and wartime recipes,” says TikTok creator Kiki Rough in a

01.05.2025, 22:20:03 | Fast company - tech
Why AI companies keep raising the specter of sentience

The generative AI revolution has seen more leaps forward than missteps—but one clear stumble was the sycophantic smothering of OpenAI’s 4o large language model (LLM), which the ChatGPT maker

01.05.2025, 17:40:05 | Fast company - tech
Trump’s war with universities could hurt AI progress in the U.S.

Welcome to AI DecodedFast Company’s weekly newsletter that breaks down the most important news in the world of AI. You can sign up to receive this newsletter ever

01.05.2025, 17:40:02 | Fast company - tech
The ‘Caveman Method’ is the latest viral skincare technique. Experts say you should think twice

The cost of a multistep skincare routine can quickly add up. But have you ever wondered what would happen if you simply stopped?

This weekend, a TikTok creator went viral for discussing

01.05.2025, 15:20:07 | Fast company - tech