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In this post
Jillian Meehan
Matthew Bischoff
Michael Liberatore
Grant Butler
Brian Capps
Michael Amundsen
Andrew Harrison
Everyone’s home screen is different. Some have lots of apps covering the
screen, some have neatly-organized folders, some are color-coordinated,
some are nearly empty, and some are downright chaotic. The apps you
choose to put on your home screen, and the order you choose to put them in,
says a lot about you.
So what do our iPhone home screens at Lickability say about us? Take a look
below and decide for yourself.
Jillian Meehan
Let me say this right off the bat: I have an intense need to keep all of my apps
on one screen. If I ever have a second page of apps, it’s because I’m trying a
few out before I decide to fully commit and give them a coveted home screen
spot.
I refuse to cover my entire screen with apps because I hate the way it looks, so
aside from my dock and my first three rows of can’t-live-without apps
(Instagram, OmniFocus, Bear, Drafts, etc.), I’m a big fan of shoving
everything into folders that only make sense to me. The best way I can
explain my folder system is that my most-used apps live on the first page of
each folder, varying in importance from left to right on the screen.
Matthew Bischoff
As you can maybe tell, I’m a little obsessive and I like things to be clear and
well-organized. My home screen is a reflection of my personality and the
apps I use every day to do my work and enjoy my life.
Michael Liberatore
Since Spotlight search is incredibly quick to find the exact app you’re looking
for, I’ve been far less precious about the organization of my apps in general.
That aside, the apps that comprise my home screen loosely fall into three
categories.
The first category, which accounts for most of my home screen (literally the
top five rows and the dock) includes the apps I use multiple times a day.
Additionally, for Messages, Spark, Slack, Things, and my most used social
apps, I want to easily see my notification badges, so I like having them visible
every time I unlock my phone instead of tucking them away in the
unorganized basement storage closet that is screens 2–5.
The second and third categories change frequently. Currently, holedown fills
category two: the games I’m playing right now. Games have a fairly short life
span on my phone, and if I don’t see it on screen #1, I’ll quickly forget about
it. The third category includes apps I’m checking out at the moment, aspire
to use more, or have just downloaded and don’t want to forget to try. At the
moment, Shortcuts is the only app in this category. I really aspire to use it
more to get hooked on iOS automation.
Grant Butler
The apps on my home screen are usually the ones that I use on a regular
basis, with the ones in my dock being the ones I use the most. Apart from
those, Slack gets a lot of use for work, and Discord for talking with friends.
Trello and Airtable are both used for convention planning and management,
so having them on my home screen is nice for easy access to that
information, especially when it’s the weekend of the event.
I’ve got a folder for games on a separate screen, but there are two that I keep
on my homescreen: Crossword and Spelling Bee, both from The New York
Times. While I’m not very good at either, I still enjoy the challenge.
Brian Capps
Here’s what Brian had to say about his home screen setup:
(Let it be known that Jillian has never once “searched” “for” “an” “app.”)
Michael Amundsen
I have a wallpaper e-mail I get each Sunday that I update my wallpaper to.
This week was green themed.
Generally, my home page has the apps I’m most actively using. Having said
that, these days I just swipe down and search for the app I need, because
most of the time, either Siri suggests what I’m looking for, or it’s faster to
search
It’s kind of interesting that, if I think about it, my primary way of interacting
with my phone or computer is to use Spotlight to search and open what I
need.
Andrew Harrison
No comment.
Team Lickability
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