Post-PC Multitasking

From Neven Mrgan (via Gruber):

Trying to “clean out” your tray is not a habit you want to get into. It’s pointless, and besides, you can never win – as soon as you run another app, in the tray it’ll go. It’s like the world’s worst game of Whac-A-Mole. Instead, learn to see the tray as a “recent apps” area. If you’re in the middle of one task – say, writing an email – and you need to switch to something for a second — say, looking up a spelling — then the tray is your friend. But once you’re done with that, you’re done.

I’d take this a little bit further: if you’re trying to “clean out” the tray, you’re thinking too much like you’re on a desktop OS. And if you’re thinking like you’re on a desktop OS, you just might be outside the target audience.

Remember two weeks ago — before the iPhone OS 4 reveal — when everybody was talking up how great the iPad was for not multitasking? The argument we kept hearing then was that managing a bunch of concurrent application isn’t something a lot of users want to do. Actually, it’s something an awful lot of users don’t want to do — how many times have you heard about the guy who doesn’t know why his computer is so slow when he has no idea how many apps he’s running?

I’m betting a large (perhaps overwhelmingly so) number of iPhone OS 4 users will never care about quitting background recent applications, just as they don’t care about quitting applications on desktop operating systems. But they won’t suffer for this ignorance the way they do on desktop operating systems, and as a result they’ll have more time for the stuff they do care about.

I’m just here to say one thing: when Scott Forstall answered the question of “how do you quit apps” with “you don’t”, he wasn’t just being terse; he was looking out for your sanity.

To put it another way: he’s reminding you this isn’t the PC anymore.

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