Tricks that use Apps to fix you

Mobile Apps (Apps) are extremely fun, but cumulatively absorb much of your time and distract you from your work. It takes more than the willpower to control your appetite for these applications. For a start, you need to understand how they work, and why they are extremely addictive.

Why You Should Be Wary of Your Applications

Many apps have fun, while some help you stay in touch with your friends and family.

But there is a darker side of applications that many of us do not know. For example, we spend a lot more time than we think we spend. Such as says Nielsen, today we spend 65% more time each month using apps than we did just before years. By the end of 2013, on average, we spent 30 hours and 15 minutes a month using apps. That's almost two full days a month.

If you need further evidence that we are addicted to our applications and phones, analyst Mary Meeker reports that on average we check our 150 phone numbers every day on our report May 2013 Internet Trends Report.

Flurry Analytics defines someone who uses "Mobile Addict" as a "mobile addict." applications more than 60 times a day. Based on their data from 500.000 applications on 1.3 billion devices since March 2014, they saw the number of "Mobile Addicts" increase by 123% between 2013 and 2014. In March 2014, there were 176 million "Mobile Addicts", and over 79 million in March 2013.Apps Addiction Apps apps

photo pacific54.com

If the manufacturers of the prior technology wanted to make their products more appealing, they did not have the data or algorithms to the extent that app developers are today. Developers can monitor each interaction you have with the app, and use this data to make their products more addictive.

Φυσικά η λύση δεν είναι να πετάξουμε όλες τις εφαρμογές μας. Είναι εξαιρετικά βολικές και προσφέρουν μεγάλα αλλά και χαρά στη ζωή μας. Είναι, επίσης ολοένα και πιο χρήσιμες. Μοιάζει πολύ με το αλκοόλ και πώς θέλετε να το χρησιμοποιήσετε. Το αλκοόλ, είναι δυνητικά εθιστικό, αλλά μπορείτε να το απολαύσετε σε υγιείς, ελεγχόμενες δόσεις.

Apps are not passive (by default). They are constantly causing you through your inbox and Push Notifications. Apps are designed to be addictive, designed to take control of your time and energy.apps mobile-device-addict

Apps interrupt your life with triggers

Are our reactions to the sound of a text, a notification, or a phone vibration in our pocket look like this? which is described by Pavlov with the experiment of. Apps developers design special hooks to draw your attention back to your mobile device.

Nir Eyal writes in his blog that these notifications, emails, or links create connections between the app and your behaviors and feelings. You will begin to feel increasingly obliged to use the application whenever you feel in a certain way. (For example, when you are somewhere and you get bruised, you almost instinctively pull out your phone). Before you understand it you will use the app more and maybe all day. You have formed a new habit.

It is tempting to react immediately whenever your cell phone starts ringing, but you need to learn to control your impulses. Apps don't want you to think (designers and developers are obsessed with removing the "cognitive burden" - which is the delay between Getting an alert and succumbing to the temptation to look at your phone).

A good way to deal with the problem is to ban push notifications from applications that you occasionally check.

If you want to keep Push Notifications, but have repeatedly found that they wake you up at night, put your phone in a separate room, and buy a .

External stimuli can be relatively easy to ignore or overcome. However, it is very likely that you have built an emotional or personal relationship with your applications. For example, you can use Facebook when you bother, the Flipboard, when you feel that you do not have someone to talk to a social event,

The next time you use your phone, try to locate the specific internal impulses that led you to it. It could be a feeling, find out what beliefs support your inner impulses.

Apps Want to invest energy in them

When you connect to a friend on Facebook, follow someone on Twitter, or connect with someone on LinkedIn, your experience with these services will be better the next time you use them. This is exactly what applications require. They want to invest time and energy to perfect your experience.

For example, if you have 1.000 friends on Facebook, but you only have 50 of their phone numbers or email addresses, you will still use Facebook to stay in touch with them. The more you upload photos to , the more you increase your dependence on it, because if you stop using it, you won't be able to access those precious photos.

If possible, collect the email addresses or phone numbers of your closest friends and acquaintances. Keep copies of the content you want on your hard drive. Likewise, don't upload if not absolutely necessary, or make sure you know how to get your data back.

Apps reward you to get you back

Apps use rewards with points, causing different kinds and emotional tensions. The unpredictable nature of these variable rewards is forcing you. You are focused on trying to get the next reward. Your apps reward you with feelings of consistency, relief and excitement.

Apps can be very entertaining, but do not forget their strength. They can cause your attention, lure you, steal your time and energy. They will reward you every time you use them.
As a first step, then, it would be good to understand how they work. Use your apps, do not let the apps use you.

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Written by Dimitris

Dimitris hates on Mondays .....

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