Summary
- I prefer iOS native applications for aesthetic unit and simplicity.
- Native applications work well for non -critical tasks, such as the weather check.
- Apple’s user -friendly interface led to my loyalty to iOS applications.
It may be one of my most unpopular opinions in all areas, but I really like iOS native applications. The Weather Apple application? Probably my most sought after option. Apple notes? All my life is there, in fact. Apple cards? Certainly the hottest socket I have ever had would be the side of this navigation tool Google Cards And Slip (Well, for the most).
These are not iOS applications – it’s me. I am known to settle for the magnificent enclosed garden of Apple, or a prisoner of his ecosystem, as some could call it in place. Anyway, I was synthetic to love all my iOS native applications, and here is why.
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Why I “set” for native iOS applications
Just because I think they are better
Apple / Pocket-Lint
Some reasons: the aesthetics, the ease and a happy mentality that everything is really not so deep.
IOS applications have an aesthetic designed to go together. It is similar to the possession of a complete set of cooking uses Le Creuset in the same color. On the other hand, assembling a collection of kitchen uses from various brands is like downloading a range of different applications that may not be as visually coherent but can offer more specialized functions.
As I am not the best cook, I appreciate the simplicity and beauty of the Ensemble Le Creuset – it does everything I need without complicating things, and always of high quality. I prefer uniformity to the collection of highly specialized but mismatched items, especially since cooking is not my strong point. I will leave the specialized tools to professional chefs.
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Bring it back to iOS, I do not use any of the native applications (such as weather, notes, compass, etc.) for everything that will have an impact of life or death on my daily life. If I was constantly going to and from the office every day, I would probably download a more specialized meteorological application to see if it would cry in a walk towards the morning train – a minute report would probably determine whether or not I should take an umbrella or even change my outfit.
iOS “just works”. It is a simple interface that I am completely comfortable using, and it is not as if the results are specific to the earth, in my world at least. If Apple tells me that there is a 70% chance of rain “around 3 p.m., I will probably bring a raincoat to my appointment at 2:30 p.m. just to be safe. If it is not raining, no harm, no fault.
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Where it all started
Before an iPhone is even in my hands
I bought the mentality “ it just works’ from Apple when I had an iPod nano, a first generation iPad mini and an iPod touch – all before winning an iPhone 5s at my 13th birthday. There was something so futuristic and Star-Trek about the Apple user interface, and the user experience was something that has everything revolutionized my reading, my writing and my entertainment at a young age at all levels.
I remember when Apple Note was this yellow with God with the black police “writing”. I loved the charm of the notebook type, and all that did not enter the original application notes went directly to the pages of my iPad Mini.
Yes, I was an apologist of the pages – the emphasis on “the species”. Now that I do not write novels on my iPad Mini and that I have a brand new MacBook Pro, I prefer by far Google Docs based on the browser.
Apple was the first operating system that felt accessible and accessible outside a full -fledged PC. Unlike clumsy Windows Desktops I learned to use in the school laboratory of the school, Apple and iOS felt elegant, luxurious and, for lack of a better term in my pre-adolescent, magic brain. I love that my devices are consistent and that all applications seem to belong together, from their application icons to the experience by using them in general.
Overall, native applications do the job. I have not encountered any carefully personal problems with Apple’s loyal applications, and I frankly do not want to scrutinize the App Store to replace them all with third parties who are better unless I get a dynamic and brilliant examination of someone who thinks that a special application would change a specific aspect of my life. Apple has no native iOS Identification of plants Application, however, isn’t it?
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