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  • TheRealKuni@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The UI/UX on iOS has improved dramatically in the last few years (especially for springboard, which was what I most hated). Coming from Android to iOS, my phone looks so different from everyone else I know who uses iOS, since their home screens have evolved over years and mine was, “how can I, in 2022, make an iPhone look as much like my Android Home Screen as possible?”

    I have one screen with a giant weather widget, and some folders for my most-used apps, plus I have four on my dock.

    To the left of the main screen is the “Today View” where I have a number of useful widgets that get me quick access to specific things.

    To the right of the main screen is the app drawer equivalent, whatever they call it. To be honest I never use it.

    Most of the time when I want to launch an app I just swipe down and type the first few letters. That’s usually sufficient. I find having used this phone for a little over a year I’m now as efficient or more efficient than I was on Android, at least for the task of getting from the home screen to whatever app I want.

    This was huge for me, because in my previous experience springboard was TERRIBLE unless the device was jailbroken. Now it’s really nice.

      • TheRealKuni@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I would still love the level of customization Android has. Major feature I’d like would be for the home screen not to push all widgets and icons to the front and left. I wish it would let me put stuff wherever I want so I could have a larger amount of my wallpaper visible while still having the icons closer to my thumbs.

        I know there are widget solutions to this problem, but that’s clunky.

        But it’s SO MUCH BETTER now than it used to be. Old springboard, that was basically just the Android app drawer, was terrible.