![]() ![]() Otherwise, I let iOS be iOS and manage its own resources and task running. I say "almost" because there are times when I'm running benchmarks or testing a beta or doing something else abnormal that I'll really need to it. Yes, you can force close iOS apps by double pressing the home button and sliding the app window up, but you shouldn't make a habit out of regularly doing it. Personally, I almost never kill all the apps on my iPhone and iPad. In other cases, though, the user must launch the app explicitly or reboot the device before the app can be launched automatically into the background. One exception is location apps, which in iOS 8 and later are relaunched after being force quit by the user. It can involve a lot of things that some Apple Geniuses believe mainstream, non-technical users will have trouble understanding and doing.It flies against Apple's recommendation, it flies in the face of best trouble-shooting practices, and it makes advanced users cringe, but.Killing everything, in that specific case, for mainstream users, is the fastest, easiest path to problem resolution. In most cases, the system does not relaunch apps after they are force quit by the user. Go to System Preferences > Users & Groups > Login Items for a list of. It can involve installing system monitoring tools, rebooting a lot, launching apps, testing, checking system status, killing apps, rebooting, deleting apps, reinstalling apps, etc. Instead of hunting for each app, though, you can do it all from one place. ![]() If a customer comes to the Genius Bar with one poorly coded app or rogue process that's continuously slowing down their iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad, or causing massive battery drain, figuring out which app it is, and fixing it, can take a lot of time and effort. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |