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The Home Screen List

4 Min Read

Most home screens are a mess of apps downloaded once and never deleted. This list is the opposite β€” apps that actually earn their spot and get used every day.

πŸ“° News & Information

  • Flipboard – Still one of the best ways to follow topics you actually care about rather than what an algorithm thinks you should care about.
  • Apple News – The best free option for following the stories that matter to you without jumping between a dozen different sites. The curated Top Stories are solid; the channel following is where it gets useful.

πŸ“‹ Notes & Thinking

  • Notion – The closest thing to a second brain most people will actually stick with. Works equally well as a daily journal, project tracker, or full knowledge base.
  • Apple Notes – Underrated and always there. For quick captures that don’t need a system, it’s still the fastest option on any Apple device.
  • Obsidian – For those who want their notes to connect and compound over time. Steeper learning curve, but the people who commit to it tend to become evangelical about it.

βœ… Tasks & Focus

  • Todoist – The task manager most people eventually land on. Clean, cross-platform, and smart enough to handle both simple to-do lists and complex project management.
  • Structured – A visual daily planner that turns your task list into a timeline. Particularly good for people who find standard to-do apps hard to actually follow through on.
  • One Sec – Adds a pause before you open distracting apps. Sounds small. Makes a bigger difference than you’d expect.

πŸ’Έ Money

  • Monzo or Starling – If you’re not already on a digital bank, this is your sign. Instant notifications, spending breakdowns, and no fees abroad. The switch takes about ten minutes.
  • Wise – For anyone who sends money internationally or travels regularly. The exchange rates are real and the fees are low.
  • Emma – Connects to your accounts and shows you where your money is actually going. Useful for the periodic reality check most people need.

πŸ“· Photos & Creativity

  • Halide – The manual camera app that turns an iPhone into something that actually feels like a camera. Proper controls, RAW shooting, and an interface that gets out of the way.
  • Darkroom – Photo editing that’s genuinely powerful without being complicated. The presets are good enough to use as-is; the manual controls are there when you want them.

🧘 Health & Habits

  • Oura – More useful if you have the ring, but the app itself is one of the better health dashboards available. Sleep data that actually changes behaviour.
  • Headspace – The one mindfulness app most people actually stick with. Short sessions, no pressure, and a tone that doesn’t feel like it was written by a yoga retreat.

What would you add? Leave it in the comments.

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