On 03/08/15 12:36, Niklas Wenzel wrote:
That's how I see it as well. We shouldn't tell users how they have to
use their phones.
Am Montag, 3. August 2015 schrieb Benjamin Zeller :
> Am 03.08.2015 um 11:21 schrieb Oliver Grawert:
>>
>> hi,
>> Am Montag, den 03.08.2015, 02:59 +0300 schrieb nikos chatziioakimidis:
>>>
>>> Hi
>>>
>>> A smartphone is still a phone. Making phone calls is the most
important
>>> part of it (at least to the majority of people i know).
>>>
>>> I never close the dialer app anyway. So i would like to have "always
>>> running" as an option (with yes as the default).
>>>
>> how about instead of breaking the app lifecycle setup, we fix it so
that
>> the apps start instantly instead of weakening the system design by
>> providing white and blacklists. sooner or later everyone wants his
>> favorite apps excluded from the lifecycle and we are as vulnerable,
>> memory and power hungry as android.
>
> +1 to that, we are already working on app startup time and
investigate different
> ways to get a better experience here.
>
> Cheers
>
> Benjamin
>>
>> lets rather fix the actual problem instead of fiddling around with the
>> symptoms.
>>
>> ciao
>> oli
>>
>>
Hi,
I thought app loading time is "unfixable" it takes time to load stuff,
end of story. I also thought that other phones load dialler faster
because they don't actually close it in the first place.
I am not a coder, but adding option to white-list apps (so everyone can
choose set of favourite apps to white-list) seems like a good idea. It
looks similar to scopes - you select scopes that you always want accessible.
On top of that - app developers could make some special "white-list
compatibility mode" that keep certain qualities of apps readily
available while muting others - less important.
The function should be optional for sure. Yes as default setting would
be good for general public. Also when you set it as "yes" you should be
allowed to choose the app to be "invisible" in apps preview (to avoid
clutter), so when I want to kill browser I don't have to scroll through
dialler, texts, scopes, music and contacts before I get to browser. Or
at least keep those "yes" apps at the end of the queue. Or swipe from
the right edge twice to get a chance to close those "yes" apps (quite
intuitive because the first swipe would open normal apps, and the second
swipe from same edge would let you edit "privileged" apps).
It's nice to see other people interested in the topic - thank you for
all the comments,
Chris
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