Macro Systems Blog
How to Limit Your Notifications
A friend tells you a story about an app that is really fun or convenient so you download it. After you download and open it up, you receive a pop up asking if you want to allow notifications from that app. You click “yes” just to get to the application and sometime later, you are asleep or working and you get a notification from the company behind the app you downloaded. Then you get another one, and another, and since you’ve click “yes” on 25 little pop-ups, you are getting a constant flow of notifications that you could completely do without. Does this scenario sound familiar? Unfortunately, in our modern world, it probably does.
Regardless of how early you got wise to this strategy, you still have notifications from at least one or two apps that don’t serve any practical use. Let Macro Systems help you limit your notifications so that you are faced with fewer distractions, and less worthless information.
The Issue with Notifications
Inherently, there isn’t a problem with having notifications: they're programmed into the software to help the user get the information they want when it happens. With modern society so connected, and with business reacting by embracing this connectivity, some notifications are necessary. Collaborative work relies mostly on real time cooperation, which is why notifications can be viewed in a positive light, in some way other than as constant annoyances that interrupt your concentration and keep you on edge all day.
Notifications in general have modified over the past several years. At first the only notifications a user would receive are ones that had to deal with direct communications. These were easy enough to manage. Sometime in the last few years, more app developers have incorporated direct information about the ongoing development of the application and application promotion. By sending reminders from an app, even if it’s rarely used, developers are hoping that marketing the app to the user that already possesses it will get them to utilize that app more. These are the notifications that need to be turned off if you hope to co-exist in a workspace with a smartphone around. Listed below is how to manage notifications in the two most popular mobile operating systems.
Android
In Android, notifications are found in many places and, in modern versions, they don’t stop when the phone is locked. Developers have built this system to be much more intuitive (which they had to with the increased number of notifications people receive) by permitting the user to set the priority of the notifications that they receive. Before Android 8.0 Oreo, this priority was set by the perceived usefulness of that notification to the user.
Most high-end phones that run Android, use 8.0 Oreo. Some have been upgraded to 9.0 Pie. Let's show you how to turn notifications off in each.
8.0 Oreo
Before we get into the Settings menu, it should be mentioned that in the notifications tray (the list of notifications you get when you swipe down from the top of any android device) you can swipe left to dismiss the apps, but if you swipe halfway, either right or left, you will reveal two icons, a gear and a clock. Pressing on the gear icon can open a setting that will permit you to block notifications for that app.
To review and set notifications any way you want to go to Settings > Apps & Notifications > App notifications, then tap on the individual apps as they are listed and what notifications you want them to send. You can also turn off lock screen notifications by going to Settings > Apps & notifications > Notifications > lock screen and pressing on the Don’t show notifications at all option.
9.0 Pie
In Android 9.0 Pie, stopping notifications is even easier. All you need to do is long press on any notification and you’ll see an option to Stop notifications. You can also simply pull down the notifications drawer (swipe down from the top) and you’ll see a new option on the left to Manage notifications.
If you choose to go into the options, go to Settings > Apps & notifications > Notifications > App notifications to see the notifications that you are getting, where you can sort them by Most recent or Most frequent. This setting is helpful to identify and alter the apps that constantly present issues.
iOS
One of the significant advantages of using Apple products is that they are upgraded to the newest version of their renowned mobile OS as it is released. Apple’s latest mobile build is iOS 12.
iOS 12
For the iPhone or iPad user, managing notifications is just as easy and intuitive. iOS 12 uses what they call the Notification Center and you can easily make edits to individual app’s notifications to upgrade your usability. First you’ll need to launch the Settings app and tap Notifications. Select the app whose notifications you want to remove from the Notification Center. It will give you a simple toggle switch to toggle notifications on or off from that app.
Notifications can be handy, but they can also create anxiety, provide distractions, and drain an individual’s productivity. For more great mobile tips, or to learn more about the technology your business depends on every day, subscribe to our blog or call Macro Systems today at 703-359-9211.
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