My iPhone Home Screen: October 2012 Edition

A new phone. A new home screen. A new social network. There have been extensive changes to my home screen with the release of the iPhone 5 and App.net's rise as my favorite (soon to be "only"?) social network. Given the iPhone 5's added screen real estate, I have an extra row of apps to cover so this might take a while to write as well as read so let's not delay things any further.

Row One

1Password has long been a standard on all of my devices. Lately, with all of the hackings and whatnot, it has become one of the most essential. Rotating highly unique passwords is possible because of 1Password's ability to generate them as needed and cut/paste them where needed.

If you don't have 1Password, buy it. If you own it but you're not using it, you're just asking for it. I'll just leave this here... you know who you are.

Calvetica remained on the Home screen for a while but I'm impatient for an expanded view for iPhone 5. Calendaring apps present situations that benefit greatly from increased screen real estate. Since Week Cal was one of the first to jump on the expanded screen, and I had it hidden on the back page, I just swapped the two and I'm pretty happy with it. I forgot how good this app was. Calvetica is on the back page for now and I'll just swap them randomly, I guess...

Awful is still in heavy use to read the SomethingAwful forums. (I hate Reddit so much -- it's the cesspool of a comment section beneath every forum post in the world but in handy forum form.)

Utilities folder
In my Utilities folder, I keep a rotating cast of characters that need more-than-occasional access and aren't accessible through Launch Center Pro (see below). Calendar, Clock, Calculator, Bing, Glassboard, GV Mobile+, Adian, Rivr all live in here. I keep moving ADN clients in and out of this folder but I'll get to App.Net (ADN) in a second.

Row Two

Instacast is back in the mix. I love the other clients I've tried but Instacast is the best fit for how I listen to podcasts. Instacast developers moved quickly to fix the complaints that heavy users like me had after a major release that changed many really good features. After those features made their way back to the app, I returned as well. It's a really good app nowadays.

Fitbit still gets my food and water consumption entered into it every day. It's become habit and the changes in the recent version of the app made it marginally better. At least it didn't make it worse, which is usually my fear after big changes.

Soulver, as Ben Brooks mentioned recently, is a really amazing product. I use it all the time for monthly expenses, working out financial planning for hiring and project management and helping my 12 year old with his algebra homework.

Settings is back on the Home screen, mainly because I use the new iOS 6 "Do Not Disturb" mode fairly often and I wanted it more accessible. If it could be toggled in Launch Center Pro or via the Notifications pull down, it'd be ideal but I'm not holding out hope.

Row Three

Felix is one of the ADN clients on my iPhone. I'm using quite a few right now, testing them out and putting them all through their paces. Felix is fantastic. The "feel" is just right, the look is aesthetically pleasing and usable and, as a 1.0, it was rock solid and stable. I was happily using Felix for about a week but then Netbot hit (yesterday) which turned things upsidedown for me. I continue to get push notifications through Felix and use it about half the time. If a few key changes get made (bookmark sync & gap expansion are the two I have in mind), it may be the client that stays on the front page.

Dark Sky remains the most magical app on my phone. Last Friday, I was working from home and Dark Sky sent me a push notification that rain was going to start in my area soon. I have a fairly long driveway (we moved to a really cool rented farmhouse last year) so I got up and went out to fetch the mail before I ran the risk of getting soaked. On the walk back to the house, sure enough, rain started to fall. Magic.

Harvest for my hours tracking. A necessary evil, I'm afraid.

Nebulous Notes has taken a huge leap in the last version. I use it across iPhone and iPad and it is the best Dropbox-integrated text editor out there. At least for me. It suits all of my needs pretty perfectly including, after some monkeying around, outlining meeting notes. It is an essential app if there ever was one.

Row Four

Netbot is a newcomer but it is a fantastic addition. Helping move ADN from a small, fringe upstart to something a bit more visible, Tapbots released a version of their streaming social network client for ADN and, while it is very similar in form and function to its flagship app, Tweetbot, what it means to people who have been on ADN for a while is significant. I have been buying, downloading and using all of the ADN clients I can get my hands on, not only to support the work of the developers but to see what new things can be done with the fledgling APIs and concepts.

Netbot uses ADN to replicate Twitter and that's not such a bad thing. Twitter's treatment of its longstanding users and developer community has been appalling. I can see, as the network expands, the apps changing to embrace some of its newer functions (annotations, privacy APIs) and grow with the features as they're added. It's a great start. As I've been singing the praises of Tweetbot for some time, I'm happy to see Tapbots on ADN too.

Google+ is still on the front page. I check it once a day but it's a weird mix of Android fans, science news and beer links.

Safari gets a lot more use now that Cloudtabs exist.

Row Five

Drafts has had some fantastic updates since my last post about it (more to come too!). It is my go-to for short text files to keep information handy like parking spots, phone numbers entered on the fly, etc. It's my digital scrap paper with the added ability to shoot these little snippets of text to all sorts of handy places.

OmniFocus is something I write fairly often about. It's about as important as my iPhone at this point.

Sparrow is back! For me anyway. I was using Mail.app for all of my accounts but I have quite a few and it got confusing. Breaking them out and serving my gmail accounts from a sad, deprecated, likely-no-longer-supported app seemed like the marginally right thing to do. Sad. Very sad.

Mail - Yuck. Although, VIPs are a nice feature, I'll admit.

The Dock

Phone - Yes Dialvetica is gone, and has made room for the stock Phone app. I'm sad that Dialvetica no longer seems like it will be getting any support or new versions (last update in December 2011) but Phone gets the job done.

Messages seems to have been fixed from the perspective of iMessage sending things to all of the right devices. Messages on the Macbook Air now seems to work with the advent of Mountain Lion and having a cohesive messaging solution that does what it supposed to do is as surprising as it is handy.

Trillian has only gotten better and better. I use it constantly as I swap from the laptop to the phone, back to the laptop, and so on with each having the same messages completely in sync. It's a staple for me and extremely stable and capable. Highly recommended.

Launch Center Pro keeps adding new Actions for apps and getting more and more useful. I haven't updated my Actions screen for a while but here's what it looks like for now. I'll be changing this soon to integrate some of Nebulous Notes new features and make better use of the screen real estate.

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So there it is. A whirlwind tour of the Home screen. I hope it helps and if you have any questions or comments, drop me line to @jeffhunsberger on app.net or Twitter.

My iPhone Home Screen - February 2012 Edition

It's been remarked that I haven't done a "State of my iPhone Home screen" post in a while. Time flies, I guess. I did a quick look back through my posts and the last time I did one was November so I guess now is as good a time as any to do a renewed assessment of what it takes to make Page One.

If you compare what my Home screen looked like in November to what it looks like today, you'll notice not a lot has changed. I had settled on a pretty solid set of tools and was happy with them. Interestingly, some of the changes were the results of feedback from readers who suggested apps that I'd never heard of. Dialvetica is one of the notable newcomers.

As an aside, there are two potential guest posters who I have been talking to lately about submitting their Home screen reviews for future posts. Hopefully, I will get their masterpieces soon and be able to post them here for your reading pleasure.

Iphonescreenfeb2012

Row One

1Password gets more and more important everyday, given how rife with security concerns everyday life has become. It is a secure, go-to app that I use all day, every day. If you don't use it on at least one device, you have no excuse when you get hacked which, face it, will happen at some point. The key is minimizing loss and preventing the hacker's access across more than one website. 1Password's ability to create and store secure websites passwords (and credit card info, secure notes, bank information, wifi passwords, etc.) and then make it easy to use them, makes it as indespensible as a web browser as far as I'm concerned.

I did a post recently about calendar apps for the iPhone and Week Calendar clearly came out on top. I've been using it happily for months and recommend it highly.

Awful gets a lot of use. From somethingawful's game threads to sports threads, it is a great source of info and entertainment. If you're a goon, this might be even better than reading on the web.

The standard iPhone Camera app was made much more useful when iOS 5.0 hit. Having access to the camera from the lock screen made all of the difference for me. Rather than launch third party apps and fumble around with them, often missing the shot I wanted entirely, I just snap in the iPhone app first, then do processing later.

I'll do an in-depth review of photo apps for iOS and Mac later but for now, my main photo processing is Snapseed. It is in a "Photo" folder on page two of my iPhone but it is magnificent for creating great photos.

Row Two

Instacast continues to improve and I use it every day on my drive to work. If you're not listening to Roderick on the Line, you are a dope.

Instagram continues to improve as well. With a slick, new interface and a growing userbase, Instagram has replaced all of the other photo sharing sites for me.

In a way, its a shame that Instagram is as popular as it is but it was an innovation seeking a vacuum and was the best of its breed. The promise of Flickr was squandered by Yahoo! because it really could have been the photo sharing site. If they had managed things better, conceivably it could have enjoyed the level of integration with iOS (and soon OS X Mountain Lion) that Twitter now enjoys and no one would have heard of Instagram.

My ubiquitous Utilities Folder has a few staples in it. Soulver, Goodreader, Path all retain their tenuous stay on my Home screen due to this folder.

Soulver has cemented itself as a great "what if" application. I do worksheets in it to sketch out things like Europe trips, monthly expenses, beer making, etc. Having variable support allows me to define things easily, then use the variables in calculations and change the entire worksheet quickly.

I've written extensively about Goodreader and it is still my swiss-army knife app. Path, despite their recent privacy issues, is still an elegant and well-designed app. I have very few contacts on there though and Google+ gets far more of my time.

GV Mobile+ is still a great Google Mobile application. It is workman-like and gets the job done. It remains on the Home screen because it gets nearly-daily use.

Row Three

The Phone app is on the front page because of Dialvetica. Since Dialvetica is just a dialer (albeit a very good one), I sometimes need to access the normal Phone app to see recent calls or re-dial a conference call number. Essentially, Dialvetica lives on the Home Row for speed, but the Phone app sits on the front page for informational purposes (the "missed call" badge, etc) and intermittent feature access.

Despite the unease I'm feeling about Google and their privacy decisions and commoditization of ... well... "me" (and you), Google+ is still a far better social network choice than fucking Facebook.

The Google+ app, while still anemic and badly designed, still gives me quick access to my Circles, which is about all I can ask for at this point. This despite the fact that it crashes at least every other use. Nice job, Google. It's not like you're doing this on a shoestring, so maybe take the time and read all of the crash logs I've been sending.

Rdio is still awesome. The tethered listening chews up the bandwidth, so I generally play music I've cached locally. Still, that's a pretty wide, constantly-changing selection so no complaints.

I have written entire posts in Nebulous Notes. Given the tight Dropbox integration (and essential TextExpander integration), I can easily switch between my iPhone, iPad and Byword or nvALT on my Mac. Nebulous is stable, feature-rich and well done. High recommended.

Row Four

Tweetbot is so good. I mean really good. It is the best Twitter client on any platform and I love using it. The new version was recently released and added a slew of neat features.

Mail is a sad necessity.

One new item on the Home screen is the Quick Entry for Omnifocus icon. I read about this on the OmniFocus forums a few months ago and the thought intrigued me so I gave it a shot. The Quick Entry button in the OmniFocus interface is pretty fast, but this method saves a tap or two and, unbelievably, is even faster. One tap launches OmniFocus and takes me directly to the Quick Entry screen. It's slick.

Safari is still the best mobile browser.

Home Row

Dialvetica is a new addition to the Home screen. It is an extremely fast dialer app for iPhone. I can usually dial contacts in 3-4 taps and that includes turning on the phone, opening Dialvetica and hitting dial. Pretty incredible.

Messages gets even more essential with the newly-announced Messages app for OS X Mountain Lion release. I know it is saving me a lot of text messages but it is the seamlessness that I find the most refreshing.

OmniFocus is something I write rhapsodically about in just about every post. It is the cornerstone of my project management, day-to-day management and life management. It would be very hard to replace.

While I still have a slightly guilty feeling about ditching Beejive for Trillian, Trillian does trump it, feature-wise, and I haven't regretted the decision to stick with Trillian for now. The killer feature for Trillian is the device chat synchronization. If I am chatting at my desk at work and then close the lid on my MacBook Air and go to a meeting, not only do my chats divert to my iPhone but the entire chat from my Air is on my iPhone when I open it up.

Another thing that has been made easier with Trillian is when I get links sent to me on my phone. Instead of opening the link and saving it to Instapaper, now I just open the chat on my Air when I get back to my desk and click the link from the synced chat text.

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So there it is. Another Home screen run down complete. Look for others in the near future and, as always, comments are certainly welcome.