About / Privacy
Privacy Policy
Updated 17-July-2020.
BoostApps is ad-free and tracker free. We do sell or share your personal information.
Personal Information we collect
Since 2017, we have not collected personal information from visitors to BoostApps. Prior to 2017 we collected the name and email address that users provided when they left a comment on the site. We used this information only for the purpose of replying to your comment. The name the user entered is published as the author of that comment. We do not publish users’ email addresses or share them with anyone.
Information collected by 3rd Parties
Gravatar – An anonymized string (also called a hash) was created from users’ email addresses when they left comments before 2017. The hash is provided to the Automattic’s Gravatar service to retrieve and display the user’s avatar or profile picture a alongside their comment. The Automattic privacy policy is available here: https://automattic.com/privacy/.
Log Files – Our web host, Pair Networks (privacy policy), and our CDN provider Cloudflare (privacy policy) create log files recording visits to this site. The information in the log files may include your IP (internet protocol) address, your ISP (internet service provider), browser you used to visit our site (such as Chrome, Safari or Firefox), the time you visited our site and which pages you visited throughout our site. This information is used only for statistical purposes and to protect the site from spam and malware.
Cookies and Web Beacons – BoostApps does not use cookies or web beacons. However our CDN provider Cloudflare may set cookies in your browser to “maximize network resources, manage traffic, and protect our Customers’ sites from malicious traffic.” For details about the cookies Cloudflare uses see this page.
You can chose to disable or selectively turn off cookies in your browser settings, or with a browser extension such as uBlock Origin. Blocking cookies will not affect the operation of this site, however, it can affect how you are able to interact with other websites. This could include the inability to login to services or programs, such as logging into forums or accounts.
Interest Based Advertising -We do not use interest based advertising.
Affiliate Links – We do not use affiliate links.
Request Your Data
If left a comment on the site before 2017 and wish to view or delete your personally identifiable data from this site please submit your email address using this form.
Try get jar some of those work
I just found a few more things on getjar: Dynamo Kid 1 & 2 (full versions), Soul Power (mentioned in earlier post) and Blackjack (version loaded on 09/20/07). There was also a Social Networking IM client called Papaya that enables you to use AIM, Yahoo IM, MSN IM, Google Talk, and ICQ all at once, but you have to sign up, create an account and give your cell number for them to send an activation code and I know some ppl may not feel comfortable doing that.
i got my 465 clutch when it came out & tried & TRIED to get Opera mini on cuz Openwave was horrible. i have been trying (to no avail) to save up $ to switch phone’s & company. THANKS 2 U my $ can go 4 something else.
THANK U SO MUCH U R MY HERO OF THE 2010
If I were to buy a sanyo incogneto, is there a way to send apps to that ? Posibly without fishing out 7 bucks for a cable?
The Incognito is essentially a Sprint CDMA phone. Direct downloading using the browser works with some sites. For the ones were it doesn’t use Rumkin: http://rumkin.com/tools/sprint/ You can also send ringtones and wallpapers to your Boost CDMA phones using Rumkin.
Here is a good one for somebody to think about. It seems that the i465, well the Motorola interface has no “Disable Automatic Update” for the time setting. My problem is that I live in Arizona right on the Colorado River and at my house the closet tower is about a mile away in California so my phone shows the time from the California tower which at this time of year is 1 hour earlier than the time in Arizona. When I go to work – a short distance away in Laughlin NV, which is the same time as California. I pick up a tower in Arizona. On every cell phone I have had this time of year, as Arizona doesn’t observe daylight savings time, I would disable the “Automatic Update” so that no matter where I went here in the area I would have the correct time I use. Anybody have a suggestion or app that will correct this problem other than moving lol