In the dark days, before the introduction of native tools on Android and iPhone smartphones, we were left to fend for ourselves in app stores if we found ourselves in need of a little light. While the flashlight-app wars may have faded over the course of the past few years, there are still many useful third-party apps with features not available in the native versions of Android and iOS. Such being the case, we took the liberty of rounding up the six best flashlight apps on the market.

Related Posts

You could soon ask ChatGPT how healthy your week really was

As noted by MacRumors, Strings inside the app reference health categories such as activity, sleep, diet, breathing, and hearing, suggesting the range of data that could be shared.

Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold is cool, but I’m more psyched about the future it teases

It’s surreal to see a device like that come to life. At least on the global stage. Huawei has already done it a couple of times with the dual-folding Mate XT pair, but that device leaves an exposed screen edge, runs a non-Android experience, and remains far away from the Western markets, including the US.

Google Photos Recap is here and the 2025 edition has a narcissism meter too

Gemini scans your library to identify themes, milestones, trips, and things you photographed often.