These are the 30 best Android apps of the year by Abhimanyu Ghosal on Dec 27, 2017, 1:17 PM Advertisement
 2017 saw a nice bunch of useful and inventive apps hit the Play store, and a number of our older favorites got some notable updates too. We’ve rounded up 30 of our favorites from our testing through the year – scroll through our list, find your must-haves and be sure to let us know which ones you’re rocking on your own device into the new year. Files Go Practically all Android phones come with a file explorer, but if you’re not happy with your current choice, Files Go is worth a look. In addition to helping you browse your phone’s storage, it also lets you send and receive files offline via Bluetooth, and displays handy cards to help you find large files, unused apps and other stuff that’s simply taking up space on your device. ➤ Files Go
Google Trips Trips was already great for automatically collating your travel tickets and bookings into one place and recommending places to visit, but it’s now even more powerful, thanks to a couple of nice updates from earlier this year. It now captures bus and train tickets as well and adds them to your itinerary. And in case you make a last-minute booking offline, you can now tap the + button and enter those details manually to keep your schedule up-to-date. Trips also now lets you share the reservations for your journey, including hotel booking and travel tickets, straight from the app via email. It also plays nice with custom lists that you’ve created in Google Maps or Search, and there’s an option to merge multiple trips into a single adventure. If you’re heading out of town for the holidays, this is a must-have on your phone. ➤ Google Trips
Grammarly Keyboard If you’re getting to grips with English, or looking to improve your grammar when writing emails, reports, and messages, Grammarly Keyboard can help. It suggests improvements to your input as you type and make automatic corrections as well, so your text reads better – while also giving you a chance to learn from your mistakes on-the-fly. My only gripe is that it doesn’t allow for gesture-style typing, a la Swype and SwiftKey, but it’s still plenty useful for folks who want to fix their grammar. ➤ Grammarly Keyboard
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