I love using Zooper widgets
I second this. When I had my Note 4 they were all I used. Well, aside from the odd reddit feed.
I love using Zooper widgets
What I like is that I can have as many widgets as I want on iOS, and they don't clutter up the home screen because they are hidden behind another screen. It's also quite easy to access them from the lock screen without needing to unlock my phone first. Handy when I want to view my step count (pedometer) or check my data usage (dataman).On Android, I typically use 3-4. On iOS, I presently have 10 activated, of which I regularly use maybe 7 of them. I know I'm in the minority here in this sub forum but I much prefer the iOS implementation since they're accessible everywhere, but that's just my preference.
What you described is the very reason widgets are more useful on Android. I can have a weather widget on my home screen that is so easy for me to glance at whenever i want. No need to do anything. It has the weeks weather for me on the screen I spend most of my time on. Widgets do not clutter the screen on Android anymore than the icons you have on IOS.....except I can move the widgets and position them anywhere i want and in any order I want them to be in. You can't do that on IOS with icons so don't know where the cutter comment comes from. I have a Google search widget on my Nexus 6 that is waiting for me to speak "OK Google" and it will do just about anything i need it to do. No need to touch anything.What I like is that I can have as many widgets as I want on iOS, and they don't clutter up the home screen because they are hidden behind another screen. It's also quite easy to access them from the lock screen without needing to unlock my phone first. Handy when I want to view my step count (pedometer) or check my data usage (dataman).
I am curious as to how widgets work on Android. How would you manage them if you wanted 7-8 widgets on your phone?
What I like is that I can have as many widgets as I want on iOS, and they don't clutter up the home screen because they are hidden behind another screen. It's also quite easy to access them from the lock screen without needing to unlock my phone first. Handy when I want to view my step count (pedometer) or check my data usage (dataman).
I am curious as to how widgets work on Android. How would you manage them if you wanted 7-8 widgets on your phone?
Is that some sort of an issue?Are they really called "widgets" on IOS???
Try Yahoo! Sports as it displays all the scores without needing to wait for it to change.
What I like is that I can have as many widgets as I want on iOS, and they don't clutter up the home screen because they are hidden behind another screen. It's also quite easy to access them from the lock screen without needing to unlock my phone first.