, February 03, 2013 8:11 PM
Subject: re: Alt F4 on iOS
Hello. Hidden is definitely the best word to describe this command.
Not many people know about it. IOs provides a way to force quit
applications. This is normally used if an app is non-responsive, but I
have used it a few times when I've been
Josh
- Original Message -
From: Lauren Simmons simmonslaure...@gmail.com
To: viphone viphone@googlegroups.com
Date sent: Sat, 2 Feb 2013 18:16:26 -0800
Subject: Alt F4 on iOS
Hi all,
In the event I may be missing something, is there an equivalent
for
Alt F4 on an iOS device? I would
Just remember that these methods are equivalent to opening up the
Windows task manager and killing an app. They aren't really meant for
closing apps on a day-to-day basis when you are simply done using
them. For the most part, iOS looks after multitasking itself and
suspends apps automatically
?
Regards,
Sieghard
Regards,
Sieghard
-Original Message-
From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Joshua Klander
Sent: Sunday, February 3, 2013 8:12 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: re: Alt F4 on iOS
Hello. Hidden is definitely the best word
Hi all,
In the event I may be missing something, is there an equivalent for
Alt F4 on an iOS device? I would like to launch an app such as Clock,
set my alarm, then simply close the app completely. As is I'm having
to go into the app switcher and go through the process of forcing an
app to close
, is there an equivalent for
Alt F4 on an iOS device? I would like to launch an app such as Clock,
set my alarm, then simply close the app completely. As is I'm having
to go into the app switcher and go through the process of forcing an
app to close. I realize Apple does what it does, and I realize that
ultimately