Not only are they free, you can run these apps on any computer over the Webno installation needed. Maybe it's time to do your work in the cloud.

We love to talk about free softwarea lot. In the last year, we've brought you the , the , the , and the , among others. What all of these apps have in commonaside from being free, of courseis that they're old school: They need to be downloaded or installed on your computer or smartphone.

Thankfully, we live in a new age where our Internet access is almost as fast as our hard drive access. This means running Web appsapps from the cloudis not just a viable option, but for many, it's the norm. Why buy a big office suite or even download a free office suite to install, when you can run great productivity apps right in the browser? We're here to show you our picks for the 99 best Web apps that make surfing the same as working on your desktop.

Note: These apps work on any desktop or laptop no matter what the operating system, but differences in your browser can have an impact. We made sure that no major download is required in order to run these Web apps, with the notable exception of the antivirus software. We do expect that you have a current browser, with Flash and Sliverlight installed. Also, we realizeas should youthat in order to get these "free" apps, you may need to register a name, email, and possibly more. Hey, what do you want for nothing?

Now, get ready to bookmark some sites that will turn you into a software-less app user instantly. Be sure to let us know which apps are your favorites, and those we might have missed.

ANTIVIRUS

1. BitDefender QuickScan

quickscan.bitdefender.com/

You'll need to download a browser extension (Firefox or Chrome only) or Web widget to us this, but once you do, you'll have a system scanner that doesn't just look at one file at a time. It only works for Windows, naturally.

2. Panda ActiveScan

www.pandasecurity.com/activescan/index/

Limited to Firefox extension or IE ActiveX control, Panda's online scanner lets you choose between a quick or full scan.

3. F-Secure Online Scanner

www.f-secure.com/en_EMEA-Labs/security-threats/tools/online-scanner/

Rather than rely on extensions, F-Secure tosses a small, Java-based app on your computer to run a quick, full, or file/folder-specific scan.

AUDIO & MUSIC

4. Last.fm

www.last.fm/

It might be the best music streaming services when it comes to social networking, and it's not bad with the music recommendations either. Better yet, Last.fm doesn't have any audio-based advertising. There are mobile versions and you can listen to it on your Xbox 360, as well.

 Read PCMag's review of .

5. Grooveshark

grooveshark.com/

Does Grooveshark have every song ever recorded? Maybe not quite, but the music search and streaming site does a great job of finding tunes and letting you add them to playlists. The "Grooveshark Radio" recommendations play like other sites in this category, giving you more music that's similar to what you like.

6. Pandora

www.pandora.com

Pandora gives the power of the Music Genome Project to the people in the form of Internet radio that you can program to your tastes. Pandora offers 40 hours of free music listening per month, with advertisement, but, thankfully, the ads aren't worse than regular radio. And you can also find it on multiple devices, not just on the browser.

 Read PCMag's review of .

7. Slacker Radio

www.slacker.com/

PCMag's Editors' Choice for Internet-based music listening has a great interface, great sound quality, and all you could ask for free listening (paid users can even get music and albums on demand).

 Read PCMag's review of .

BILLING & FINANCE

8. 1DayLater

1daylater.com/

Freelancers, if you use the simple interface at 1DayLater to track all your time, mileage, and expenses for later billing, you'll never forget what you need to hand in with an invoice.

9. Buxfer

www.buxfer.com/

Manage not only your own expenses, but that of a group (like your ne'er-do-well roommates) when you sync Buxfer with your bank or import statements or financial data files. You'll be able to generate reports on who owes what; there's even an IOU view.

10. Doxo

www.doxo.com/

Dubbed "your digital filing cabinet," Doxo isn't just a place to securely stuff digital docs (even though it can). You can connect to utilities and financial providers to give you a paper-free way to manage (and eventually pay) bills.

 Read PCMag's coverage of .

11. FreshBooks

secure.freshbooks.com

Our perennial Editors' Choice for online billing/invoicing lets you manage up to three clients for free, which could be perfect for the small, sole proprietor getting started. Everything you need for fast follow-up, payment via PayPal and other gateways, and adding expenses is built in.

 Read PCMag's review of .

12. Mint.com

www.mint.com/

Intuit's Mint.com replaced Quicken.com for good reason. The site gathers your banking information from all of your accounts, credit cards, and loans and reports back on how your finances fare, with advice on how to budget for improvement. It remains our Editors' Choice for personal finance tools.

 Read PCMag's review of .

BLOGGING

13. Google Blogger

www.blogger.com

Blogger has been around a long, long time (in blog years, at least), but very recently Google's made some major improvements to the blogging and hosting service, including adding a rich text editor and enabling mobile versions of posts.

 Read PCMag's .

14. Posterous

www.posterous.com

You can be blogging or podcasting in mere moments with this zero-learning-curve service. The real nice thing: you can do all your posts via email or text, and then watch them be disseminated out to your social media base automatically.

 Read PCmag's review of .

15. WordPress.com

wordpress.com/

There's a bit of a learning curve up front, but the popularity of this blogging and hosting platform speaks for itself, especially the polished interface that is the best in the business. You get over 100 themes to pick from for your site. It's PCMag's Editors' Choice for hosting blogging.

 Read PCMag's review of .

16. Tumblr

www.tumblr.com/

This is your best bet for a visual site, where the video and images take precedence over the text. It's perfect for beginning micro-bloggers.

 Read PCMag's review of .

BACKUP

17. Backupify

www.backupify.com/

The free version of this online service will automatically backup as many as three social networks worth of data for yoube it from Flickr, Twitter, Photobucket, or others. Daily or weekly, you'll get an email telling you that Backupify took care of the job. Then if your networks ever go down, your years of precious status updates and uploads don't go away forever. You can then access the backups through the site, which feeds them to you via RSS.

18. Windows Live SkyDrive

skydrive.live.com

Microsoft gives anyone with a free Window Live account 25GB of free online storage for any kind of file you'd like to upload. You can then share the documents with others via email, even with a whole group of other SkyDrive users. If the files are Microsoft Office docs, any Windows or Mac users can view them. And with Office Web Apps (see below), you can also edit them.

CALENDARS

19. 30 Boxes

30boxes.com

Want an online calendar that really looks like a calendar? Well, 30 Boxes does, no matter how many days of the month there are. It also adds in a to-do list and ability to share calendar entries with your fellow 30 Boxes buddies.

20. Cozi

www.cozi.com/

Designed with families in mind, Cozi includes a calendar, shopping and to-do lists, and a journal for keeping track of everything you have to do and what gets done at home. Use the Cozi smartphone apps to manage things even when you're not home.

21. Google Calendar

www.google.com/calendar

Whether you want to see things by day, week, month, or just your agenda in one big list, Google Calendar has a view for you, plus an almost foolproof Quick Add function that recognizes dates and times without you explicitly spelling them out. Share or import calendars as much as you desire, color code your events (and soon, appointments), and sync the data with offline calendars or view it in your RSS reader. The possibilities continue to expand as Google Calendar gets updates.

22. Yahoo Calendar

calendar.yahoo.com/

First reviewed by PCMag in the year 2000, Yahoo's online calendar has made some recent updates to make it a contender once again. Originally, it sported an address book, to-do lists, and a notepad. Now the interface features some drag-and-type event entry, color coding, calendar sharing, subscription, and a lot of what's found at the competition.

EMAIL

23. Gmail

mail.google.com

Google's Web-based email is bare-bones and, because of that fact, the fastest you'll find. Anyone with a Google account can (and probably should) take advantage of this free service. It comes complete with regular innovation from the Gmail Labs experiments, secure connections, Google Contacts, and one of the best spam filters ever built.

 Read PCMag's review of .

24. Windows Live Hotmail

www.hotmail.com

Our favorite webmailthe latest version is our Editors' ChoiceWindows Live Hotmail has improved its interface, its mobile Web version, and its ability to view multimedia right in a message. Clear your inbox and give this version of Hotmail a chance.

 Read PCMag's review of .

25. Yahoo Mail

overview.mail.yahoo.com/

The prettiest webmail you'll see (so far), Yahoo Mail didn't only get a style update. It's faster, too. Unlimited storage for attachments also means never having to worry (or having to delete old messages).

 Read PCMag's review of .

FILE CONVERSION/TRANSFER

26. DropSend

www.dropsend.com/

A lot of the file-sending sites out there are gummed up with confusing ads and purely unprofessional appearances. At DropSend, sending a single gigantic fileup to 2GBis a breeze. Upload it, put in your email and you recipient's email, and you're done (once you navigate some ads). You can only do it five times a month for free, but it doesn't come easier than that.

27. Let's Crate

letscrate.com/

Like DropSend, you don't have to do much. Just drag-and-drop a 50MB or smaller file to the site (there's no awkward uploading) to create one of 6 "crates" you get for free, with a total of 1GB of space among them. Share the link to your crate and let others download as needed.

28. net2ftp

www.net2ftp.com

Want to avoid using an FTP client just to transfer one file? Net2ftp can handle the transfer via its Web interface. All you have to do is know the server, username, and password. A flashy, Flash-based version is in testing; give it a try.

29. ZamZar

www.zamzar.com/

So you've got a file that you wish was in a different format. It doesn't matter if it's a document, audio, photo, video, archive, or an ebook, Zamzar can take it, as long as it's under 100MB (bigger files will cost you a subscription fee), and change it into what you need. Then it will email you a link to download it. You can also use it to download Internet videos, like those on YouTube.

FUN/HOME

30. Geni

www.geni.com

With Geni, you can grow your family treecomplete with images you uploadand connect them in every way possible, even with other trees built by your family.

31. Showoff.com the Visualizer

www.showoff.com/apps/default.aspx

To use this app, you just need to upload a picture of your home that you want to visualize. Then you can use it to figure out exactly where you'll be planting this year or how to move furniture around without breaking your back.

32. timetoast

www.timetoast.com/

Whether you're using it for fun or for serious work, building a timeline has never looked better than with timetoast. Publish yours for all to see, or get the embed code to put it in other webpages (ala YouTube videos).

GRAPHICS

33. Aviary

www.aviary.com/

Much more than just graphics editing waits at Aviary. It has editors for images, vector graphics, color touch up, even special effects in the "visual laboratory," and a screen capture tool. There are also audio editing/recording and music creation apps. They all require flash to work.

34. Fatpaint

www.fatpaint.com/

If you want more than just image creation and editing (you want sales!), then check out Fatpaint. It incorporates Café Press-like retail options for your images to sell on apparel and other merchandise.

 Read PCMag's review of .

35. LunaPic

www.lunapic.com/editor/

Overlook the interface and go for the effects. You'll find lots you can do to animate and spice up an image at this free site. Plus, there are the usual editing options. With no sign-up, it's a good place for a quick stop to edit a picture.

 Read PCMag's review of .

36. Picnik

www.picnik.com/

With the free version of Google's Flash-based, online, image editor, you are limited to only uploading five images at a time, but beyond that, it's about as full-featured as an online editor can get. It syncs up to numerous social networks (Picasa, Flickr, Facebook, MySpace, Photobucket) for image placement and even has tools for easy avatar/icon creation.

 Read PCMag's review of .

37. Photoshop Express Editor

www.photoshop.com/tools

Visit the tools section of Photoshop.com and you'll find the Express Editor, Adobe's online apps. They include the Express Editor for doing the quick edits or filters (the kind of thing the full version of Photoshop is known for), plus a style match tool for photos, an image organizer, slideshow creator, and a drag-and-drop, upload tool. Considering it's made by Adobe and in Flash, it works about as fast as you would imagine, with no sign-in required.

38. Sketchpad

mugtug.com/sketchpad/

Not only do you not have to sign in at Sketchpad, you are instantly provided with a workspace to start drawing a masterpiece. Paint with "paint" or "light" as you see fit. Click save and a PNG of your art is instantly made available for download.

39. Splashup

www.splashup.com/

If you're comfortable in Photoshop, you'll like Splashup which has a very similar interface (even more than Adobe's own Photoshop Express Editor). You can not only save images to social networks, but pull images from them to edit, which will require signing up for a Splashup account as well.

40. Sumo Paint

www.sumopaint.com/home/

Upgrades have made Sumo Paint even more Photoshop-like in appearance and performance, even the filters. Manipulate your existing images or draw your own. There's no social networking built in, but Sumo is all about the art.

41. SVG-edit

code.google.com/p/svg-edit/

While the vast majority of these Web app image editors do all their work with bitmaps, sometimes you gotta go vector. In that case, turn to SVG-edit, an open-source, HTML-5/Javascript-based editor for SVG-based vector images. You can view them as wireframes and even edit the source code.

42. Thumba

www.thumba.net/

One of the few online image editors that does drag-and-drop image opening, Thumba runs with Microsoft Silverlight installed, and does a speedy job of it. While it won't win any interface design awards, it's a perfect image editor for low-power PCs on the road.

IM/CHAT

43. imo

imo.im/

A slick interface is the first thing you'll like about imo, which lets you access MSN, Skype, Yahoo, Gtalk, Facebook, AIM, ICQ, Jabber, and MySpace as you want. It's not just for typing; it supports video chat, as well. Sign into one, and then you can add others to the overall list of friends. Like TinyChat (below) you can use the 'imo now' feature to send anyone a URL that was created on the fly for an instant video chatroom. Check out the Android and iOS apps if you need to chat on your smartphone.

44. KoolIM

www.koolim.com

KoolIM is one of many fast ways to access individual instant message accounts without installing software, even for obscure/overseas services. Plus, you can sign up for a full account to manage all those individual accounts.

45. Meebo

www.meebo.com/

You can do a quick check into any IM service Yahoo, AIM, Gtalk, Windows Live, even Facebook, and otherswith the Meebo site, but it's true strength is using it to aggregate all those service into one big buddy list. Meebo will keep an ongoing message history for you of every conversation. The interface is polished (albeit with ads to keep the lights on), and the mobile app on iPhone is a beauty.

 Read PCMag's review of .

46. Trillian for Web

www.trillian.im/chat/

More famed for its downloadable, multi-protocol, IM client, Trillian also offers online-only access either via a full Trillian account that aggregates all your other IMs, or you can individually sign in to AIM, Facebook, Windows Live, Yahoo, Google Talk, ICQ, Jabber, and MySpaceIM.

47. TinyChat

tinychat.com/

What was originally just a way to create a quickie, disposable chatroom online (just go to tinychat.com/[insert your name] to make one) has evolved. Now it's perfect for video chat as well, with the capability of adding up to 12 simultaneous broadcasts to a room. Hollywood likes it; stars like Ashton Kutcher and Sean Combs are investors, while artists like Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars use it to communicate with fans. Sign in with your Twitter or Facebook credentials to reserve your private room today.

MAPS

48. Google Maps

maps.google.com/

Navigate the highways of America and beyond at Google's version of a satellite map/GPS mash-up. And of course, Google's Maps are frequently mashed up with amazing new features like geo-modeled 3D images of buildings, the exhaustive street views, and, of course, your personalized list of important locations.

49. Bing Maps

www.bing.com/maps/

Not to be outdone by Google, Microsoft's Bing Maps features directions (for walking and transit as well as driving), traffic views with CCTV cameras, and extra apps galore, such as a distance calculator and ways to figure out taxi fare before you take a ride. That's just scratching the topographical surface of what your inner cartographer could discover here.

NETWORKING

50. Meraki WiFi Stumbler

meraki.com/tools/stumbler/

This Java applet on your Wi-Fi enabled laptop does all the work that it used to take dedicated, expensive tools to do: It finds all the nearby wireless access points/routers and makes it a little easier for even non-pros to troubleshoot network problems.

 Read PCMag's review of .

NOTES

51. Evernote

www.evernote.com

While it has got many methods of use beyond the Webincluding desktop downloads and mobile appsat heart, Evernote is all about storing whatever you see worth keeping online in your own online depository. You can then access and organize the stored info at your leisure, either with those apps or right on the site. Your "notes" can be anything from text to images, audio, and video.

 Read PCMag's review of .

52. Penzu

www.penzu.com

Most people write online to get an audience, but keep private thoughts in a diary. If you prefer the PC and the Web, but still want privacy, Penzu promises to be your personal journal that will never be shared, not even with nosy siblings or parents, and you can't lose it. Of course, since it's digital, you can do more, including insert photos and search previous entries. And if you really do need to share, there's an option for that.

53. Springnote

www.springnote.com/

Whether you take the notes for yourself or for group collaboration, Springnote's raison d'être is just that, taking and editing notes. However, it does it with something extra that makes it more like a wiki: autosave. Now you'll never lose your notes. You get 2GB of space. Naturally, there's an iPhone app for accessing your notes on the go.

54. Springpad

springpadit.com/

Add notebooks or tasks, or look up what you think you want to remember, then add that to Springpad. You can make it public for others to see, or keep it private, but tag it for finding later. Organize them by tag or by the type of things they are, from appointments to places. Use the apps on you handheld or iPad to access your notebooks on the go.

55. ThoughtBoxes

thoughtbox.es/

Ready to give some mind-mapping a try? ThoughtBoxes gives you three trains of thought for free and off you go with organizing your ideas. The site provides examples of what you can do with these thoughts, specifically building tasks around them. Add a new box when you get a new thought to deal with, and color-code it as needed.

OFFICE

56. Google Docs

docs.google.com/

Frequently evolving, Google's online-only office suite doesn't format docs quite like Office Web Apps, or have the sheer number of tools found at Zoho, but it makes up for that in speed, simplicity, and simply getting things done. You can store any kind of document with the service, and edit word processor docs, spreadsheets, presentations, drawings, or even use a form to make a Web-capable survey. Sharing documents is as easy as sending someone access via email.

 Read PCMag's review of .

57. Microsoft Office Web Apps

office.live.com

Got Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or OneNote documents stored online with Windows Live SkyDrive? You can now edit them without even owning the full Microsoft Office suite via Office Web Apps. They mimic many of the features of the full appmore than enough to compete with Google Docs at leastright in the browser. Multiple users can edit and collaborate on the same document at the same time. (Stick to using it in IE for the best results.)

 Read PCMag's review of .

58. PaperRater

paperrater.com/

Afraid you might have clung a little too closely to your source text? PaperRater will not only check your grammar, spelling, and word choice, it looks for plagiarized passages. Remember kids, paraphrase!

59. Prezi.com

prezi.com/

Does Prezi's unique, single-canvas zooming make you pay more attention to the tech than the content of a presentation? Maybe, but it's so damn cool. You put all the elements of your presentation in one space, set up the jumps you want from item to item, and Prezi animates them for you in a final output created in Adobe Flash, so you can take it with you. A free account means your presentations, up to 100MB worth, are shared by default. You have to pay $59 a year to go private.

 Read PCMag's review of .

60. PrintWhatYouLike.com

www.printwhatyoulike.com/

Want to print part of a webpage, but not the entire thing? Load that page through PrintWhatYouLike. You get to drag and select just the important parts, and you can even change the font, font size, and background colors. Then send it to your printer, so you can only, uh, print what you like.

61. SlideRocket

www.sliderocket.com

Our Editors' Choice for online-based presentation building was recently purchased by VMware, and hopefully it won't change much. The free plan for "lite" users still gives you the same elegant interface that made our reviewer a believer in making presentations in the cloud.

 Read PCMag's review of .

62. Sync.in

sync.in/

One thing the various office-style Web apps excel at is collaboration online, and that's what Sync.in is all about. It's a Web-based word processor at its simplest, but it's really meant to be used by multiple users in real-time, with instant updates, comments, chat, versioning, and even a "time slider," so you can see previous comments and iterations if you come in late.

63. TypeWith.me

typewith.me/

Based on the old EtherPad, Google has created this version, which lets you create a shareable text document online without ever needing to sign up. This is the way to go when collaboration has to be super-simple and a little more private.

64. Zoho Docs

docs.zoho.com/

The free edition of Zoho Docs doesn't provide much space, only 1GB for free (really just a taste to get started). But if you don't need much, you won't find a bigger supply of online office apps, as it integrates the usual word processor, spreadsheets, and presentations, plus Zoho mail and chat integration, to work on securely-stored files with as many collaborators as you want.

READING

65. Ibis Reader

ibisreader.com/

While it's also available on smartphones and even iPad, Ibis Reader makes for a beauty of a Web-based ereader for any book in ePub format. The site has instant links to books already in the public domain, so you can start immediately (but be warned, many of the "new" titles are distinctly not-safe-for-work excerpts.)

66. Instapaper

www.instapaper.com/

If you're a voracious reader but don't always have time to read everything that you find interesting online, Instapaper will help you read things later. You tag what you find online and then can read it later in the Web interface (or on the various Instapaper mobile apps).

 Read PCMag's review of .

67. Kindle for the Web

www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?ie=UTF8&docId=1000579091

For now, you can only read samples of Amazon's many Kindle books with this beta Web app. But keep checking back. The book seller says that full-text Kindle book reading is coming soon to the browserno download required.

68. Scribd

www.scribd.com/

Think of Scribd as the YouTube of documents. Anyone can upload their documentation, fan fiction, original compositions, books, manuals, etc, to this site for sharing with a few million people looking for something to read. When you read, you can "readcast" what you like to social networks, and then you get full stats on what you upload to see if it gets popular.

 Read PCMag's review of .

RSS FEED READERS

69. Google Reader

www.google.com/reader/

Google's RSS reader is now the premiere product of its type, both online and off (most downloadable RSS readers sync with your settings at Google). It's quick, easy to navigate, easy to manage, and makes it easy to share your favorite posts from the blogosphere and beyond.

70. Netvibes

www.netvibes.com/

Now with a new view called "reader," Net Vibes lets you view your RSS feeds and more in a cleaned-up view. Of course, if you still love movable Widgets full of data, such as those for email, search, weather, and shopping, they remain a viewing option.

71. Good Noows

goodnoows.com/

Considered by some to be the best alternative there is to Google Reader, Good Noows (Get it? Me neither.) also gives you control over the layout of the page, giving each topic section a view like "front page," "Guttenberg letters," "tweet stream," and others. It's nowhere near as speedy as the competition, but it sure is pretty.

SMALL BUSINESS

72. AceProject

www.aceproject.com

Five users on five projects for free? That's a good deal, especially with the 250MB of free space and free time-tracking AceProject throws your way.

 Read PCMag's review of .

73. AnyMeeting

anymeeting.com/

Setup a free account and you could soon be having Web conferences with two to 200 people. AnyMeeting (formerly Freebinar) has email invites, video broadcasting, and can display your presentations to others via screen sharing. The audio portion can go VoIP over the Web or via a conference call number AnyMeeting provides. You can also record everything for posterity (or blackmail).

74. Basecamp

basecamphq.com/

This is the ultimate in easy when it comes to project management, even at the free level, which includes only one project, two online whiteboards for collaboration, and 10MB of storage. Our review of this Editors' Choice product calls it the "benchmark of free online project management."

 Read PCMag's review of .

75. Dabbleboard

www.dabbleboard.com/

Need a whiteboard to share some ideas with your compatriots spread hither and yon? Dabbleboard's interface makes it easy to draw shapes (which it instantly improves), to type, and to share your creation with unlimited users, even on the free version. You can upload images as well.

76. Doodle

www.doodle.com/

If you need an invite service just to schedule a meeting, visit Doodle. It will send out the invite with your suggested meeting times and then let others get back to you with a mutually agreeable spot on the calendar.

 Read PCMag's review of .

77. Huddle

www.huddle.com

Think of Huddle as the entry-level but precision tool for your SMB. It has 100MB of free storage (more than the 10MB offered by both Zoho Projects and Basecamp) for you to start managing projects, hold meetings, and communicate with your team (albeit not via chat). Tutorial videos will get you up to speed on each new aspect of the service.

 Read PCMag's review of .

78. Rypple

rypple.com/

Rather than work with your team, Rypple is all about accelerating their performance. In other words, it's for managing and evaluating the work that gets done. Yes, it's a real-time performance review site that's perfect for the SMB sans a human resources department.

79. Scribblar

www.scribblar.com

With Scribblar, you can jump into quick whiteboarding with multiple users. Sign up, create a "room," send invites, and you're off and running. Make it public or private. The board itself has all the usual tools for making objects, text boxes, etc., and you can change the properties of all of them after they're drawn, even if they were drawn by someone else in the room.

80. TeamLab

www.teamlab.com/

A perfect little online collaboration space for your entire team? TeamLab has it covered with project management tools, document editing you can share, and ways to communicate with the team, from blogs to IMs to (coming soon) internal emails. And none of it costs a dime.

81. Wedoist

wedoist.com/

The makers of the Todoist online task manager for individuals built Wedoist for team projects. Sign up is fast and so is inviting others to work on projects you create. You share updates in an interface like a Facebook wall, but with the option to upload attachments, add tasks for the group, assign tasks to individuals on the team, and chat with those who are online. It keeps a full, searchable history of what you have accomplished as you go.

82. Zoho Projects

www.zoho.com/projects/

The free version of Zoho Projects only lets you manage one project and gives your team only 10MB of space. If you can work within those restrictions, you'll find a vast set of features for communication and collaboration.

 Read PCMag's review of .

SOCIAL NETWORKS

83. Brizzly

www.brizzly.com

Get easy access to the updates of the day on Twitter or Facebook with Brizzly in your browser. The Brizzly Picnics feature is a new feature to help you get started with group chat among your followers and friends.

84. HootSuite

hootsuite.com/

Not only can you read, post, and manage all aspects of your social networking in HootSuite, you can use it to track statistics about what's happening. The free version tracks up to five social profiles and a couple of RSS feeds. It shows ads to keep costs down, but all the social analytics, such as click stats and retweet reports, are free.

 Read PCMag's review of .

85. Nimble

www.nimble.com

PCMag's Editors' Choice for social media management, Nimble integrates Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn data, plus Gmail, Google Contacts, and Google Calendar, all in a simple framework that's all about really managing relationships. The free version is extremely limited (to ten posts, albeit with unlimited team members on your account), but worth a try.

 Read PCMag's review of .

86. Seesmic Web

www.seesmic.com/products/web

While Seesmic has many apps for download, even on phones, why bother when the Web-based version can handle all you need, such as multiple accounts with Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin, Salesforce Chatter, Foursquare and Google Buzz?

87. Threadsy

www.threadsy.com/

With Threadsy, you get access to your social networks (Twitter and Facebook) and emails (Gmail, AOL, Yahoo, MobileMe, and IMAP accounts) all in one massive aggregated inbox.

SURVEYS

88. SurveyMonkey

www.surveymonkey.com

Big names use SurveyMonkey to gather data, and so can you. For free, you can ask a ten question survey and then get 100 responses on it before you start a new one. Send out invites to it via social networks, and you'll get all the response you need in no time.

89. Wufoo

wufoo.com/

Wufoo gives you a simple interface to create up to three surveys at a time, each with ten fields and 100 responses allowed per month. The built in HTML form builder makes it a breeze to create and then drop the survey into your own site.

TASKS

90. Todoist

todoist.com/

Your tasks here are called projects, but otherwise you're looking at a powerful to-do list at Todoist. Sub-tasks are available from the start (unlike with some of the competition), plus the usual litany of features, like prioritizing tasks, drag-and-drop reordering, and project labels. There are plug-ins for browsers if you want them and views for your handheld, which is where all the hard work happens anyway.

91. Toodledo

www.toodledo.com/

Its high customizability makes it a little more complicated, but Toodledo is worth it for the task-heavy user. You can use it to see what you're working on the most, view your tasks in a calendar view, organize task by folder, and track your time. You can even make a hotlist of the items that are the most important to complete. Naturally, you can call up the list on your smartphone, too, or print out a little to-do booklet to carry with you if you're old-fashioned.

92. Remember the Milk

www.rememberthemilk.com/

No other Web-based task manager comes close to having the depth and breadth of features that Remember the Milk does. Synch it up with your main online calendars, handhelds, and social networks, and even with Microsoft Outlook, and you'll never forget to do an important task ever again.

VIDEO/NETCASTS

93. Animoto

animoto.com/

The lite version of Animoto will have you making 30-second, video greetings in no time. For any occasion, upload your still images and video clips, pick out some music tracks, and Animoto does the rest, making it look professionally spliced.

94. JayCut

jaycut.com/

Unlike graphics, there aren't a lot of video-editing Web apps. So JayCut stands out with a spiffy time-line interface, the ability to work with all kinds of video (even Flash FLV files), and great transitions and text options. Source media from your hard drive, your microphone, or your webcam to make your masterpiece.

 Read more about JayCut at AppScout.

95. Screenr

www.screenr.com/

Need to take a screencast on your Mac or PC? This website will, using a Java app. You can record everything on your screennot just what's in your browserto publish as an animated, screen-grab movie. It even includes your voice-over audio. Then share it with anyone, even via a social network. Log in with Facebook, Twitter, Google, Yahoo, LinkedIn, or Windows Live IDs, whichever you prefer.

96. Ustream.tv

www.ustream.tv

The fastest and probably best way to live-stream yourself, your on-screen work, or any other kind of home-grown live programming to the Web is our PCMag Editors' Choice for live video broadcast, Ustream.

 Read PCMag's review of .

97. YouTube

www.youtube.com

Perhaps less an app than the overall platform synonymous with online video, Google's YouTube site is the home of all the greatest memes, music videos (many from partner and music industry joint venture Vevo), and more snippets of obscure video than anyone could ever hope to trace. It's also the perfect place for you to put your videos, too.

VOICE

98. Google Voice

www.google.com/voice

Most voice over IP and messaging services (think Skype) require a download, but not Google Voice. It's a one-stop inbox for voicemail (which it transcribes) and text messages, and it will even help you place a call on your own phone. Pair it up with your other voice services and you'll have a communication power tool. (It's free, but calling overseas can cost you.)

WEB DESKTOP

99. Jolicloud

www.jolicloud.com/

Want to get access to the apps above and more in a personalized, online space that you can access quickly from any computer? Jolicloud is just that: a webpage "desktop" where you can get access to apps like Gmail, Office Live, and moreeven the web-side of downloadable tools like Dropbox, Skype, Google Voice, or VLC player. Jolicloud has its own app center, so you can add more anytime. Naturally, the "public page" lets you share what you're doing as well. It might seem a little redundant to your own computer desktop, but put it to use on a low-power system or something like a Chromebook, and you'll see the advantages. (Or download and install the Joli OS on your computer to run Jolicloud as your exclusive way of getting things done.)