MegaSack DRAW - This year's winner is user - rgwb
We will be in touch
I have worked out how to download them
I have worked out how to update them
How do I delete them?
Why can't Apple make interfaces I understand and phones with batteries that last all day?
press and hold until wobbly, press the x
that all sounds jolly complicated CaptJon - could they not have acheived something simpler?
Of course - the old 'press and hold until wobbly interface' how intuitive.
Cheers
They do make batteies that last all day...
you just need to close the apps that are running in the background...
Double click the home button, and the screen will lift, it will then show along the bottom all the open Icons...
Hold one of them till it wobbles, then close it..
Repeat to fade...
You probabaly have loads open, that are running in the background, even though you arent using them..
Think of them like tabs on IE..
thanks teetosugars. That I never knew!
cheers also, teeto. v handy
There's an ap for that...
if you 'double tap' you can also access ipod controls when its on hold.
teetosugars I think thats just recently used items, not running apps
Bit of both MrNutt some will be running in the background others there for fast launch.
Yes, the double home button tap is the equivalient of ALT+TAB on Windows. The apps, though, are not quite as "active" in the background as a normal multi-tasking OS would allow them to be - they are only allowed to do certain things to reduce the amount of battery they can consume.
If an app is in the background but not monitoring its position by GPS (like TomTom) or streaming content from the Internet (like TuneIn Radio) then they're not really consuming battery power in any kind of noticeable way.
(I'm kinda learning the dev kit at the moment...)
Rachel
MrNutt - Member
teetosugars I think thats just recently used items, not running apps
No,apps are [i]always[/i] running unless you shut them down..
Oh - and if you do leave TomTom running in the background whilst walking into the office you are visiting, it's pretty freaky when your handbag tells you to "turn around when possible"...
If only I had listened...
Rachel
No,apps are always running unless you shut them down..
Uh uh!
What you need is iDelete
[i]What you need is iDelete[/i]
What I need is Nokia
Ooh, ooh, can I be smug about my choice of phone? Yeah?
What you need is HTC - Advanced Task Killer and they're gone
Right, that double click thing revealed I was running every app I have every looked at. Could explain the short battery life.
How do I close an app down properly? All I do at the moment is hit the home button.
No,apps are always running unless you shut them down..
No they aren't, at least not most of them. Not in any meaningful, battery using way. On an iOS older than 4, not at all. On iOS 4, some apps can run in the background in a very limited way (mainly GPS trackers, things that play music etc.) which can use battery, but it will be obvious if they're running (your satnav is going, or you can hear music).
As a developer, it is slightly annoying, and limits what applications can do quite a lot, but you can see why they do it - they don't want people to have to worry about manually closing applications ever, they're aiming at a demographic who don't want to have to think about multiple apps running at once.
Joe
imo - if its not using the GPS, its not really going to run down the battery.
If the little arrow is showing in the top right of the screen - that means an app is running GPS stuff right now. Best close it down if you are not using it (this will be things like sat nav, or cyclemeter)
Other apps are not really doing anything - so will not drain your battery
BTW - you can also use the wibbly icons thing to rearrange the icons on your screen
Ooh, ooh, can I be smug about my choice of phone? Yeah?
What you need is HTC - Advanced Task Killer and they're gone
Why on earth would you need a specific application to do what double tapping on an app does perfectly well? Jeez, Apple make a perfectly usable, simple OS interface and some muppet has to overcomplicate it. Comes of using cruddy Windows OS I guess.
+1 for allthegear and joemarshall
Apple's whole excuse for taking so long over implementing multitasking was that they wanted a version that didn't kill the battery.
What they came up with (and got stick for) was essentially a way to swap out apps to a save state while supporting some very limited true multi-tasking for specific jobs (e.g. streaming music or GPS navigation while doing something else).
And yes WCA it is pretty obvious. The "wobbly thing" is also how you organise your apps and put them in folders. If it was really too much if a struggle then you can also delete and re-organise them using iTunes.
