• @[email protected]
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    1271 year ago

    Why would you choose to subscribe to linkedin notifications? Why, in particular, would you choose to receive linkedin notifications on your watch?

    Notifications is a privilege you should only grant to key applications, and watch notifications should be the most important of all notifications.

    “Here’s a guy” via linkedin is not on the list of approved high-value notifications.

    • @[email protected]
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      371 year ago

      I agree. But I also haven’t meet anyone IRL who curates their notifications. In fact most people don’t seem to give a shit what apps they install and their notification bar usually has 3000 alerts pending.

      • @[email protected]
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        291 year ago

        People are weird AF. I restrict almost all notifications and what’s annoying sometimes these assholes (looking at you Google Play) re-enable them.

      • @Just_Not_Funny
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        1 year ago

        I’m the person OP is talking about and my wife is the person you’re talking about.

        It is physically and emotionally painful for me to have to look at or use her phone.

        • @[email protected]
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          81 year ago

          Does she also just leave the apps in their original download place on her home screens? I always wonder about the lives of people who have like 5+ screen of unsorted apps.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            My wife has six home screens each with a random selection of apps and widgets. I feel like there would be more order if they were just in the position they landed when she installed them. She never clears notifications or closes browser tabs. I feel anxious whenever I use her phone to do anything.

          • cassie 🐺
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            1 year ago

            I am this person too. I open every app I use by opening the full list and scrolling. If it’s one I use regularly I remember where it is via muscle memory… until I (un)install another app and it’s shifted over by 1. My notifications are full of weeks-old Discord notifications I never gave a shit about in the first place, SMS messages about prescriptions I’ve already picked up, and beneath the “important” section there’s a horrific underbelly of junk emails, random ads from other apps, system notifications, news, duplicated emails across Gmail and Outlook, etc etc etc…

            I’m fairly techy and know these are easily solvable things, but I’m pretty unorganized irl with a healthy dose of ADHD too so these habits take some effort and time to build. I’ve poked at disabling notification categories per app and organizing my app shelf but I don’t stick with it much. Sometimes it’s unclear what notifications are in which categories, and apps update and add notifications all the time that I then have to go in and disable again. I can organize my apps on my screen, but muscle memory works “good enough” to the point that I forget to use the organized screen and just dive into All Apps again.

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              I’m mildly neurotic (if such a thing exists) about my app layout. I was so happy when Apple gave us the option to just not have apps install to home screens, and instead just stick in the list. I have a select few apps I use regularly that are in folders on my one single Home Screen, and the rest I get to by using spotlight.

              I don’t necessarily judge those of you who go with the “they stay where they installed” approach, I just have a hard time grasping it from my side. Haha

      • @[email protected]
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        161 year ago

        If my phone buzzes at any point and I don’t want to see what it shows me, that app loses all notification permissions immediately.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          This is the way.

          Also, there are many apps that can have their notification silenced so it doesn’t ring or show on the lockscreen. I do this even for emails. The phone is checked easily more than 50 times a day, many notifications can sit silently and wait till I next pickup my phone for something else. Ringing should be reserved for things that need immediate attention worth the interruption.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            After the recent news about using push notifications to track your activity, I disabled all notifications.

            All of them.

            I’ll look at my phone when I look at it. If you need something desperately, you’d probably call…

            Not that I’d pick up. But I’d know to check everything else before I decide to text you.

            I’m slowly cutting my phone out of my life. I’ve been hurt too many times and I’m defederating from modern society.

        • @clearleaf
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          41 year ago

          Sometimes I give apps a one star review because of this.

      • @Evotech
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        51 year ago

        Same, it’s actually triggering given how easy it is.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      Have you ever tried unsubscribing from LinkedIn notifications? The are like 300 and you have to do them all individually