![]() Wouldn’t it be cool if your phone knew to enter airplane mode when you go to the theater, or text… Read more Third-Party App IntegrationsĮach of these three services has strengths and weaknesses when it comes to which third-party apps they support, but how many is an easy enough question to answer: Which works best for you depends entirely on your needs.Īndroid Automation Showdown: IFTTT vs. Regardless of which app you end up using, all of these simplify your life by automating basic tasks you’d otherwise have to do manually. For now, Flow is free as long as it’s in preview. But hey, at least there’s also an iPhone version. Chances are, that doesn’t include you, unless your company is deep in the Microsoft ecosystem or you’re a student. Currently, Flow is a “preview” build on the web, which aside from being a bit limited in scope, also limits it to work or school email accounts. Flow works like IFTTT, with two-step automation recipes called “templates.” Also like IFTTT, you can browse other people’s templates or share your own. As you’d expect, Flow’s strength is its integration with Microsoft apps and services. Microsoft Flow: Flow is the newest automation tool on the block and it’s the most limited. ![]() For $20/month, you unlock Zapier’s real power, including access to all 500+ app integrations and multi-step zaps. While Zapier has a free plan, it limits you to five zaps at once, locks off access to certain apps, and can only make two-step zaps (just like IFTTT). That said, Zapier doesn’t have mobile apps. Where IFTTT limits itself to two steps (this happens, then that happens), Zapier supports multi-step zaps (this happens, then that, that, and that). ![]()
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