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Top 5 Essential Apps You Should Want Use ):

Hello Friends, This Time Is Digital, You Digital, Also Your All Device Is Digital..

There Are So many Apps, But I Can Help You To Find Which Apps You Should Want Use,

So Let's Begin, 

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There are so many Windows apps out there, that picking a list of the very best, most must-install software for your desktop or laptop feels daunting. We’ve pored over pages of recommendations, countless forum posts, and lots of comments to come up with this year’s Lifehacker Pack for Windows, a list of software champions across four categories: productivity; internet and communications; music, photos, and video; and utilities.

Internet and Communication

Google Chrome or Firefox Quantum (free)

Screenshot: Firefox Quantum
Firefox has always taken a back seat to Google Chrome—and it still does, if you’re only looking at market share. Mozilla dropped some formidable enhancements into Firefox with the release of Firefox Quantum in November of 2017, and the two browsers are closer in performance and usability than ever before.
So, it would be wrong to say that one is better than the other; it’s really a question of personal preference at this point. Which UI do you enjoy? Which browser has the extensions you use most (or are most familiar with). Which feels like less of a performance hog when you have 30 tabs open at once?
As we noted in the Lifehacker Mac Pack, Chrome still feels sluggish when you’re trying to load a ton of tabs at once, but it’s pretty good about using less CPU power and memory than other browsers. Is that enough to tip the scales in Chrome’s favor? Not really. If you’re a Windows power user, you’ll probably keep both browsers installed on your system in case you need to switch to one or the other for whatever reason—or because you like testing both for a few months before you make a final decision about which to keep.
Opera is also a great alternative to both Chrome and Firefox. It’s similarly speedy, comes with a built-in VPN, and integrates WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, and Telegram directly into an easy-to-launch sidebar. If you’re chatty, this might be worth checking out as well.

Skype (free)

Screenshot: Skype
As we wrote in the Lifehacker Mac Pack, there are plenty of services you can use to have video chats with your friends and colleagues: WhatsAppGoogle HangoutsHouseparty, and even Facebook Messenger itself. Your smartphone undoubtedly has a video-chat service built in as well.
So, why Skype? Microsoft recently updated the app to make it more user-friendly and pack it full of even more useful features. As a single, standalone app, Skype can do it all: file-sharing, one-on-one and group video chats, text and instant messaging, screen-sharing, translation, and voice messages. (Too bad it can’t synchronize with Facebook and import your existing contacts.)

Music, Photos and Video

VLC (free)

Screenshot: David Murphy (VLC)
The best reason to put VLC on your Windows system is because it’s a thousand times better than Windows Media Player. It’s not bloated, it plays pretty much any media file you throw at it, and it does an excellent job cranking out as smooth a picture as you can get on systems that aren’t quite so powerful. In other words, if you’re trying to watch a high-definition video on a less-than-stellar laptop, for example, VLC has the best chance of giving you the highest quality experience you can get. It’s not a miracle worker, but its hardware decoding capabilities are formidable.

Adobe PhotoShop ExpressPaint.NET, or Gimp (free)

If you just need to do simple photo editing—tweaking some colors; flipping and rotating shots; and adjusting parameters like contrast, brightness, and white balance—it’s hard to go wrong with Adobe’s free Photoshop Express. You can edit RAW photos (!), correct a variety of issues, and apply a number of different filters to give your shots a little extra flair. It’s a great tool if you need more than what you’ll find in Windows’ default Photos app, but the thought of opening up a tool like PhotoShop—the full version—gives you dread.
More advanced users who want PhotoShop-like functionality without paying for it should check out Paint.NET and Gimp, two excellent (free) apps, listed in order of their complexity, that give you a lot more control over your photos and graphics than simpler “photo correction” apps. These two have been staples of the image-editing scene for as long as we can remember; they’re still maintained and updated—the latter a bit more than the former—which should give you an indication of their staying power and overall usefulness. (Also, they’re great tools for familiarizing yourself with a PhotoShop-like environment before you take the big, paid plunge.)

Utilities

DropboxGoogle Drive, and Mega (free-ish)

Screenshot: Dropbox
There are plenty of cloud storage services you can use to back up your critical files or sharing files with friends (or the web at large). We’ve covered their costs, and the competition, pretty extensively, and we think that Dropbox is a great, all-encompassing solution for most people’s cloud storage needs. That said, you only get 2GB of free space with the service unless you get creative.
Google Drive gives you up to 15GB to play with, and it’s similarly easy to synchronize files to your laptop or desktop and work on them offline. If you need even more than that, consider Mega. You get 50GB of free cloud storage and a handy app (MEGAsync) that you can use to sync files to the cloud. The only downside is that Mega has an annoying transfer quota of around 1GB or so in a 24-hour time span. So, we wouldn’t use this to, say, back up our hard drives, but it’s a great tool for files you want to store on the cloud and access on occasion.

qBittorrent (free)

Screenshot: David Murphy (qBittorrent)
The free BitTorrent app qBittorrent is a dream. Its easy-to-manage interface should be pretty familiar for anyone who has used a torrent-downloading app over the past few years, and its open-source development (hopefully) ensures that it will remain to advertise- and crapware-free forever.
The app covers all the basics just fine, including support for VPN connections, RSS-based downloads, and a remote web UI for controlling the app from afar. We also appreciate that qBittorrent can automatically move finished downloads to a new directory—like “done”—rather than clogging up your primary downloads folder. Even better, you can schedule the app with bandwidth limits for when you don’t want your BitTorrents to eat up your Internet connection, and you can even have qBittorrent shut itself down (or your system) when it’s done with a big download, you leecher, you.

7-Zip or PeaZip (free)

Screenshot: David Murphy (7-Zip)
Yes, you can extract.ZIP files in Windows directly, and those are probably the kinds of archives you’ll encounter most. For everything else— including.RAR,.TAR,.ISO,.VDI, and.VHD, to name a few—the open-source app 7-Zip is a simple, lightweight way to extra files from, well, everything. Its user interface isn’t the prettiest, but that won’t matter to most people. If you’re bothered, check out PeaZip, a free alternative to 7-Zip that slaps a nicer GUI on top of 7-Zip’s core functionality.

Notepad++ (free)

Screenshot: Notepad++
If you love a good text editor—because it’s way more fun to hand-code a website than deal with a WYSIWYG editor, for example—Notepad++ is a great tool. No matter what programming language you’re using (such as HTML, C++, Swift, et cetera), Notepad++ likely has a visual setting that will automatically color-code your variables as you type. It’s a great way to keep your code organized, and that’s just one of the app’s basic features.
With built-in support for macros, incredibly comprehensive search features, a lovely tabbed interface for working with multiple documents simultaneously, and Plugin support, Notepad++ is an excellent alternative to Windows’ default app for text editing.

Ditto Clipboard (free)

Screenshot: Ditto Clipboard
Instead of having a boring ol’ default clipboard that only remembers the last thing you copied. Ditto Clipboard keeps a running history of everything you CTRL+C (or however else you prefer to copy files). No matter what you copy—text, images, or code—you’ll be able to select it and re-paste it at any point.
That's All Today, Hope You Like This.
Post Credit: David Murphy
From: https://lifehacker.com

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