
Viticci had pre-release access to Workflow and as such, was able to create a number of workflows that he's shared - including "Print to PDF" (an Action Extension), "Find Lyrics", and more.

There's probably nobody on the planet who can explain iOS scripting better than the creator of, Federico Viticci. If you've created a workflow that is useful and you're proud of, you can share it with others through the Workflow gallery. Workflows can be standalone "apps" that you can add to your home screen, or you can create Action Extension workflows that run in the share sheets of other apps. For example, under calendar you'll find actions like "Get end date" and "Current date" under maps, a way to get a Google Street View image of a location or request an Uber. All of this is done with simple, colorful drag and drop interface.Īctions are categorized by type: calendar, contacts, documents, maps, music, photos & video, scripting, sharing, text and web. Doing this is easy you create a blank workflow, then begin dragging actions from a huge list (153 built into the app at launch) over to that blank sheet. Upon launching for the first time, Workflow takes you through a short tutorial to demonstrate the process of creating a very simple workflow - having the iPhone or iPad camera take three pictures, turn them into a GIF movie, and then share the GIF. Workflow (launch price of US$2.99, regularly $3.99) is an app for creating automated workflows on your iOS devices that can do just about anything you can think of. But it appears that the developers at DeskConnect saw the Sherlock writing on the wall, so they decided to create an app that is - in one word - amazing. It's still around for those who haven't yet upgraded to the new operating systems.

It was an amazing set of apps that gave the pre-iOS 8/Yosemite world the ability to do AirDrop-style transfers between Macs (and PCs) and iOS devices.
