If you’re wired into the Apple ecosystem it is really hard to get out. All your gadgets are linked, they have your music, apps & photographs, so you might need to check out some hacks many are unaware of.
Every tablet or phone user for example, thinks that force quitting running apps will save battery & that it is best practice when trying to save resources so you have to manually upswipe all open apps.
But experts have warned, yet again, that it is a complete waste of time. In fact, it could actually bring the opposite effect of the one that is intended.
The practice of closing down background sandboxed apps may be a misconception if using modern app based operating systems, for example the Windows 10 UWP apps, or when using iOS or Android O. This is because Apps in the background are effectively ‘frozen’, severely limiting what they can do & freeing up the original RAM they were using. iOS originally used this concept so that unfreezing a frozen app takes up way less CPU (& energy) than relaunching an app that had been force quit.
Not only does force quitting your apps not help, it can actually hurt . Your battery life will be worse and it will take much longer to switch apps if you force quit them in the background.
Apple’s feature was one of the big technical advantages that iOS held over Google’s Android operating system, because it forced apps to quit when they were not in use to stop them using up memory. Until more recently Android apps have had to be relaunched again by the OS when they are reopened - a much slower process than simply “unfreezing” them.
So every user in the world who habitually force quits modern background apps manually may be wasting all of the effort that went into this while simultaneously wasting their own device’s battery life & making everything slower for themselves!












