have ever been in dare need of some structure as to how you approach
your day, you really might want to try
your hand at one of the many
common time management techniques that rely on scheduling blocks of
time to accomplish tasks throughout the day. Let's take for instance, the
Pomodoro Technique is a very brilliant and popular strategy that breaks
your day and divides it into 25-minute chunks. You then can try to
install a Pomodoro Application just like Focus Booster or even
PomoDoneApp. You can then make it
simple and skip applications
wholly and simply use your phone's timer to chunk up your day.
●
Secondly, you can make dare use of the search bar of your phone to
get results. You can search for anything and everything. You probably
may have been wasting a whole lot of time as you try to find things on
your phone, from your Application list down to your contacts and even
down to your calendar entries. But actually, the built-in search tool can
serve you a lot, it can discover a wide range of things for you more
rapidly than you ever can. There is really no need to find the calendar
app, open it, and start looking for an upcoming appointment. This is
also very true about contacts, email
messages, and even text messages,
your
Application list, your file manager, and even the websites. For
instance, if you have an iPhone, Spotlight
Search is even more
powerful than an Android's search bar; it can do simple mathematics
without opening the calculator.
●
Also, you can allow your phone to read anything aloud to you. You
should try as much as possible not to be
looking at your phone while
driving — it is very very dangerous and often illegal. But you can truly
reclaim that lost time by having your phone read so loud to you.
Talking to and with you. This is almost a feature that is entirely
unknown to some settings and some devices. Still, the iPhone and
Android can peruse any screen resoundingly — messages, instant
messages, website pages,
application screens, and even Kindle books.
You need to turn the element on in the Settings application; for iPhone
as a point of instance, you have to click on the "General" tab of the
settings Application and then also click on "Accessibility," then on
"Speech," and finally turn on "Speak Screen." Now, for you to get your
phone to read anything out loud, you then need to swipe down with two
fingers from the highest point of your device on any screen — for