Do you order your most-used apps at the bottom of your smartphoneâs screen? Are they lined up along the side for your dominant thumbâs convenience? Maybe theyâre neatly packed away in folders? Or perhaps, thereâs no method to your madness and your icons are placed entirely at random on your device?
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Whether youâve tried them all or havenât given it a second thought, arranging the icons for your phoneâs apps can be visually pleasing, not to mention efficient.
To discover some of the most useful ways to display your apps, CTVNews.ca spoke with a number of tech experts to learn how they order their app pages and what they recommend.
1. Folders by theme:
Tech guru, TV personality and busy mom swears by the folder method when sheâs positioning her app icons on her Samsung Galaxy S7. The Toronto-based tech expert categorizes her apps into folders by theme such as travel, social media or kids.
MacArthur said she doesnât use the gaming apps her eight-year-old son favours on her phone, so she puts them all in a folder to keep them in one place.
âI think Iâm probably like most people, especially parents, where I end up having a lot of apps that arenât apps that I use,â she explained. âI think folders have just become an easier way to manage some of those different apps.â
For those naysayers that argue that folders make it difficult to find certain apps, MacArthur has a simple solution. She uses the search function on her Android phone, in her case Google Gesture Search, to quickly find what sheâs looking for.
MacArthur strongly recommends making use of the search bar on your device (for Apple phones just swipe down) to quickly type in the name of the app you need.
Amberâs pro tip: Donât forget to regularly delete the apps you donât use. If you havenât used it in six months, delete it.
2. Reachability:
With her large iPhone 7 Plus, Toronto-based web designer and tech expert arranges her apps based on how easily she can reach them with her thumbs. She says she prefers to have all of her apps on one screen so her home screen is a combination of folders and standalone icons.
Because itâs more difficult for her left thumb (sheâs left-handed) to reach the top of her phone, Swartz places her most used apps at the bottom of her screen and the folders with the less-used ones at the top.
âI put the lesser-used apps or the lesser-used folders in those literally harder-to-reach places,â she said.
Like MacArthur, the folders located at the top of her screen are organized by themes, such as music or photography.
Averyâs pro tip: Experiment by moving icons around and trying different methods to see what works for you.
3. Migrate apps:
Tech journalist says heâs always paying attention to how frequently heâs using his apps. If he finds that heâs regularly tapping a certain app, he says heâll migrate it to the home screen of his iPhone 6.
âI tend to promote the apps that I use the most from the back end and I move them forward as I use them,â he said.
Although he doesnât have a specific schedule for moving his apps around on his six pages, the Tampa, Fla. author says he tends to rearrange icons several times a week. He finds that he really only needs the 20 or so apps on his home screen on a daily basis.
âMy everyday apps are on the home screen. Some of the lesser stuff, like banking for example, is on the second screen and then it goes from there,â Walker said.
Andyâs pro tip: Pay attention to what apps youâre using the most often and give them priority by moving them forward.
4. Edit the app drawer:
Both Android and Apple devices include an app drawer (sometimes called a dock) at the bottom of the home screen with four or five app icons already in place.
Toronto-based Tech expert says not enough smartphone users edit the apps that are in this convenient location. He says he swaps out the prearranged apps at the bottom of his Samsung Galaxy S8 Plusâ home screen and replaces them with ones he uses more often.
âYou donât have to use the ones that they give you if you donât use them,â Saltzman said. âFor example, Apple will give you Safari as their web browser but a lot of people prefer Chrome so why keep Safari down there when you donât use it?â
Saltzman said smartphone users can usually add an extra icon or two to the app drawer for extra convenience.
Marcâs pro tip: Use your voice to search for apps. For example, on Android devices, you can say, âOkay Google, open Uberâ or for Apple phones, you can say, âHey Siri, open Uber.â