Windows Smartphone Apps Apps

6
Programs

Showing 1–6 of 6

XBOX APP

XBOX App v2605.1001.12.0

9.19 MB · Free · 12,226 downloads
The Xbox app enables game streaming, social connections, parental controls, and cross-platform gameplay for users.
5.0 1
Get
YouTube TV App

YouTube TV App v10.18.0

77.8 MB · Free · 12,221 downloads
The YouTube service is actually pretty good and worth its money, particularly because it allows one subscription to…
4.0 1
Get
Samsung Smart Switch

Samsung Smart Switch v4.3.24062.1

25.0 MB · Free · 12,196 downloads
Samsung Smart Switch allows easy data transfer from any device to a Samsung Galaxy, supporting photos, contacts, and…
4.0 1
Get
JW Library

JW Library v2022

163.3 MB · Free · 11,301 downloads
JW Library is a Bible study app offering multiple translations, publications, videos, and daily text, supporting Android, iOS,…
5.0 2
Get
Pinterest app

Pinterest app v14.18.0

166 MB · Free · 11,293 downloads
Pinterest is a visual search engine where users discover and share images, videos, and creative content.
5.0 1
Get
WeChat

WeChat v4.1.9.35

153.2 MB · Free · 10,601 downloads
WeChat also allows you to make movie tickets, restaurant and hotel reservations in just a few taps. It…
4.0 1
Get

About Smartphone Apps

This group collects smartphone applications — the kind of software that normally arrives through a phone's own app store. They are listed here for reference, with their platform and details, so you can read about an app before installing it from the official store on your device.

A good share of these are companion apps. They extend a service that lives elsewhere — a streaming subscription, a social network, a video-call platform, a gaming account — and on their own they do little. The app is a window onto an account, which means it needs that account, a connection, and periodic updates from the store to keep working.

Permissions are the thing worth a moment's thought with any phone app. A messaging app asking for the microphone makes sense; the same app asking for location or contacts may or may not, depending on what it does. Phone systems let you review and revoke permissions after installation, and it is reasonable to grant only what an app genuinely needs.

The safest source for any of these is the platform's official store, where apps are signed and screened. Installing mobile apps from unofficial sites carries real risk, since a tampered app can ask for broad access under a familiar name. Use the listings here to learn what an app does, then install it the standard way for your phone.