Business and smart home Android device automations
Save time at work and at home with IFTTT (aka IF This Then That). Join a community of almost 30 million consumers, creators and smart home automation enthusiasts that use IFTTT to save multiple hours out of a typical day. IFTTT’s simple no-code interface, combined with 1000+ of today's most popular business, personal and smart home apps, allows you to quickly create sophisticated workflows. Discover the power of Android device automations while on the go with location based features, notifications, and widgets. Download the app today for your Android device or Wear OS.
Here’s a few Android device automations to get you started:
Control and automate key features of your Android phone like Bluetooth, WiFi, ringtone, and battery Write then cross post to multiple social networks Connect and control every aspect of your smart home Create and summarize content with IFTTT AI. Automate even more apps with IFTTT Webhooks.
IFTTT AI services AI Content Creator, AI Prompt, AI Social Creator, AI Summarizer, AI YouTube Assistant
Top 40 business apps on IFTTT Acuity, Airtable, Aweber, Buffer, Calendly, Clickup, Constant Contact, Discord, DocuSign, Dropbox, Eventbrite, FaceBook Lead Ads, Gmail, Google Ads, Google Calendar, Google Docs, Google Forms, Google Meet, Google My Business, Google Sheets, Gumroad, Instagram, LinkedIn, Mailchimp, Microsoft, Notion, Pipedrive, QuickBooks, RSS, Shippo, Slack, Stripe, SurveyMonkey, Todoist, Trello, Webflow, WordPress, X(Twitter), YouTube, Zoom
Top 40 home apps on IFTTT Aqara, Arlo, August, Blink, Coinbase, ESPN, FitBit, GE, Google Assistant, Google Nest, Google Wifi, Home Connect, Honeywell, Husqvarna, iRobot, LaMetric, LIFX, Midea, MyQ, Nanoleaf, NZXT, Philips Hue, Ring, Sengled, Somfy, Smart Life, SmartThings, Soundcloud, Spotify, Strava, SwitchBot, Twitch, Weather Underground, WeMo, Wink, Withings, Wyze, Yeelight, Yelp
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How to install IFTTT - Automate work and home APK on Android phone or tablet?
Download IFTTT - Automate work and home APK file from ApkClean, then follow these steps:
Update Phone Settings
Go to your phone Settings page
Tap Security or Applications (varies with device)
Check the Unknown Sources box
Confirm with OK
Go to Downloads
Open Downloads on your device by going to My Files or Files
Tap the APK file you downloaded (com.ifttt.ifttt-v4.58.1-ApkClean.apk)
Tap Install when prompted, the APK file you downloaded will be installed on your device.
A: Just like Windows (PC) systems use an .exe file for installing software, Android does the same. An APK file is the file format used for installing software on the Android operating system.
Q: If I install an APK from this website, will I be able to update the app from the Play Store?
A: Yes, absolutely. The Play Store installs APKs it downloads from Google's servers, and sideloading from a site like ApkClean.net goes through a very similar process, except you're the one performing the downloading and initiating the installation (sideloading). As soon as the Play Store finds a version of the app newer than the one you've sideloaded, it will commence an update.
Q: Why ApkClean.net can guarantee APK 100% safe?
A: Whenever someone wants to download an APK file from ApkClean.net, we'll check the corresponding APK file on Google Play and allow user download it directly (of course, we'll cache it on our server). If the APK file does not exist on Google Play, we'll search it in our cache.
Q: What are Android App permissions?
A: Apps require access to certain systems within your device. When you install an application, you are notified of all of the permissions required to run that application.
Don't hesitate to contact us if you have any questions or concerns.
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User's Reivew
3 ★IFTTT has been around for a long time and has had most features free and unlimited, until recently. Auto archiving my applets and only allowing 3 unless I pay for a pro version, IFTTT made me realize I don't need it. I was already uncomfortable with the integration with all my services, but I made an exception for convenience. This year 2020 has removed a lot of convenience so turning off IFTTT isn't gonna make any more difference. Thanks for the good years, good luck.
1 ★The service is now crippled. IFTTT changed their model, to add some new features for paid tier. That's fine. No problem. New features, small fee. The problem here is the previous features and capabilities got transitioned into the paid tier. Things that you could do for years, are now restricted behind a paywall. Not cool. Someone will come along and take this user base that's begging to be adopted.
1 ★Excuse me, but for $9.99 you get a Microsoft 365 family subscription. It gives you a ton of things, including 1TB of online storage (OneDrive), all the desktop apps, web access to everything, and that's for up to 5 members. Thats $1.99 per month per person. Oh, and it includes Microsoft Flow - that's right, an automation app. You know what I don't like the most? When a startup is using its users as beta-testers and content creators, and then stab them in the back with subscription.
2 ★IFTTT is a necessary evil for power users. It is apparently the only decent app of its type, but its service is godawful. Today, none of my applets ran until 8:42pm, when they all suddenly caught up and ran at once... and then promptly stopped working again. And this is nowhere near out of the ordinary for IFTTT. Every time I run an applet using Google Assistant, I have to cross my fingers and pray that it will work. And the interface is so unintuitive. But I'm stuck with it...
1 ★Garbage app used to work great. The interface is a mess that makes no sense. It's impossible to find what your looking for. You can't create your own applets without jumping through hoops. Used this for a long time and dealt with the poor interface but now applets are taking so long to load it makes them useless. No easy esy to add new services quickly. When stuff breaks and you need to remove and readd services it deletes everything so you have the pleasure of spending hours redoing things.
5 ★haven't even scratched the surface and WOW, this thing does it all. extremely helpful, user friendly (does all of the work for you), and an absolute must have for anyone who has tech of any kind. simply add all of your devices and it opens more options to add, sets up and links the services required, and all it asks is to add permissions (if required to make that skill work). just add it and spend 15-20 mins setting skills up. then go about your day. its automatic and impressive.
2 ★Most of the stuff doesn't seem to work on the Samsung note 10+. For example, shut wifi off/on when entering/leaving area. IFFT fires off the notification that it completed the action but wifi is never shut off/turned on. There are many other applets that just don't work either unfortunately. The only ones that do seem to properly work at the kind that don't require modifying settings like gif of the day. one thing I found that did work was a trigger to send a text msg and raise the volume
1 ★Horrible. The UI and the functionality that was working perfectly is no longer working. I mostly used IFTTT using location based services. I have a number of services to mute or unmute my phone based upon location. This not working anymore really puts this IFTTT app in the trash bin. UPDATE: uninstalled due to being completely ineffective. Android 10, WIFI, and Location Settings were not effective. Moved to MacroDroid Instead.
1 ★Ever since the revamp with V4, the app has been terrible. It's now confusing, frustrating and is lacking basic elements. Creating an applet from scratch is now very confusin to get to, hidden in menus and not front and center. The core of IFTTT is creating your own applets and that's now hard. There should be a plus or a "create new applet here" on the main screen instead of burying it in menus. Viewing all your applets is also buried, hidden in the service menu instead of a list of everything
1 ★I used to use this service all the time about 8-10 years ago, but the use cases I have for the service don't really pan out, and there are better apps that do more and don't charge nearly as much. I wanted to use IFTTT to notify me of Xbox Series X restocks so I can finally buy one, but the notifications come 15-30 minutes later, whereas the restocks only last 20-30 seconds. It's an extreme use case but it highlights the shortcomings of the tech. I just have no use for IFTTT anymore.
1 ★Previously one of the best apps. Unfortunately, it's now nearly unusable. A major portion of the features no longer function reliably such as location, wifi connection, or even notifications. Not to mention it has one of the worst UIs for user experience and does it's best to hide features and functionality. I can't think of an app that has a UI that contradicts common sense and best practices more than this one. Pass on IFTTT unless you absolutely need it.
1 ★Terrible - Was working great when I was using the free version. Upgraded to pro, and it stopped working. When I emailed customer support I was told it was a third party service, even though some of the applets not working didn't use it, and I was pretty sure it has to do with subscription. Ended my trial early, and it started working again once my account was free. Obviously they have some setup responses and don't really look into the situations, despite customers concerns.