![]() I have been journaling since I was a child and have amassed over 6,400 entries inside Day One. & Automattic is the most precious app on my Home Screen. Made in Canada too!ĭay One: Day One by Bloom Built, Inc. It's brilliantly designed, powerful, offers oodles of customization, and is far more responsive & intuitive than the official Reddit app. I have been a massive fan of Apollo for years, and the app has become the only way I can stand to browse/post on Reddit anymore. Things) that keeps me productive is Apollo for Reddit by Christian Selig, the app that is perhaps guilty of making me the least productive. Photo Folder: This folder holds Darkroom, Pixelmator Photo, Instagram, Halide, Pixelmator, Linea Sketch, Facetune, & Lightleap.Īpollo: Right below the application (i.e. As a bonus, the savage sarcasm this app provides always helps keep my self-esteem in check. The degree of customization, breadth of notifications, and insights about future weather have been essential for helping plan around Canada's ever-unpredictable weather. Also, I love the icon.ĬARROT Weather: CARROT Weather by Brian Mueller is another app that has been a mainstay on my Home Screen for years. I have the application across all my devices and use it (primarily via the Share Sheet) to collect links and sections of text that I want to remember. It's beautifully simple and uncluttered - it does one thing, but it does it exceptionally well. Tot: Tot by The Iconfactory has been an indispensable lil' application for collecting little snippets of data. It has remained at the top left of my Home Screen for years because of how important it's been in helping me stay organized. Things: Things by Cultured Code has always been a mainstay on my Home Screen going back to July 2008 and the launch of the App Store. This is an easy way to refresh my Home Screen without swapping apps and can provide variety if the Home Screen starts looking too monochrome. I am also a huge fan of alternate app icons, with 8 of the 11 icons that offer customization using an alternate icon. It is bright and colourful & filled with my favourite apps. The Utilities II Folder holds a collection of apps I either don't mind having installed but use less frequently to apps I wish I could get rid of but keep installed for one reason or another.įinally, I like my Home Screen to pop. The Photo folder holds all of the design/photography apps I use on my iPhone, and Utilities I contains the nine critical apps I access less regularly and thus don't need prominence on the Home Screen. I don't keep any apps inside my App Library that I don't have on this Home Screen. Anything not on this Home Screen is either deleted or relegated to one of three folders: Photo, Utilities I, or Utilities II. ![]() Apps like Apollo and Things fall primarily into the Love category, while apps like Lose It! remain on the Home Screen to prompt me to use them. I keep apps I love using and those I use most regularly on my Home Screen. ![]() That number (Apple & third party apps) currently sits at 79 (which honestly feels like several dozen too many). ![]() I keep every non-Apple app on this Home Screen and try to maintain as few apps as are essential on my device. My second page features all the other apps I use daily. But as basic as I am, you're not reading this, and I'm not writing this to share my all-Apple Home Screen. ![]()
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