Though it’s been a full service pack-and-ship courier solution in a tiny handful of markets for the past few years, its free, available-to-all comparison shopping tool rolled out this year and makes Shyp worth the download even if you never actually use its pickup-and-pack offering. If you need to ship something–anything–save big bucks by doing a little competitive analysis with Shyp ( Android, iOS, web). It’s free while you build yourself up to 200 subscribers, then $5 per month thereafter. Revue ( web) lets you opine on interesting articles with the click of a browser bookmarklet, pull in content you save to other services (or create yourself) automatically, and drag and drop images with ease. If you’re spending more than five minutes each week on your email newsletter, you’re doing it wrong. Build an Email Newsletter That People Will Actually Read Stop making yourself miserable online! The Blissify ( web) Chrome extension uses your webcam to gauge your emotions, and blocks sites that make you scowl too often. Whether you’re across the pond and want to be able to stream stuff you’re only able to stream at home, you want to severely limit your exposure on the web, or you want to try to dodge litigious content providers, Opera turns setting up a secure, globe-hopping connection into a quick trip to the settings menu. The ever-underrated Opera ( Windows, Mac, Linux)–again, not new but exceedingly rejuvenated in 2016–did the unthinkable this year and piped a free, unlimited VPN right into its web browser. Virtual private network connections: cumbersome to set up and expensive, yes? No. Once you’re up to speed on the day’s events, the app offers up additional fun-fact stories hell-bent on making you smarter in general: how the moon was formed, how high schools got started, how fire works that sort of stuff. It’s easily digestible, easily swipe-able, and… fun? Hardbound somehow makes news fun. Imagine getting a daily roundup of news wherein each story is broken up into a five-minute series of flashcards: mostly images, with a little text here and there. Hardbound ( iOS) can be kinda tricky to explain but it’s nothing if not unique.