Easy Mode is a simplified user experience option for first - time smartphone owners, providing
large home screen widgets that focus on the device essentials.
Not exact matches
Samsung fills all five
home screens with
widgets upon
widgets; there's one for the weather, a
large clock, a photo gallery, and
widgets corresponding to Samsung's email, calendar, and social apps.
By default, all five
home screens are devoted to
large widgets that highlight content from Google Play, including movies, music, books, and magazines.
This includes (but is certainly not limited to) the ability to ascribe live news feeds, weather forecasts and other similarly helpful «
widgets» to your five
home screens, which means you can see at a glance what iPad users have to open a specific app for — and here on a
large screen widgets really do come into their own.
Finally, we should note that some of the
home screen enhancements of stock Jelly Bean have been ported over too, so icons can now be bumped out the way to make way for
larger widgets.
Similarly, if you're using a live wallpaper or have a
large amount of
widgets on your
home screen, these also take up CPU, graphics, and memory resources.
The default
home screen is dominated by a
large widget that offers a couple rows of dynamically - changing app icons.
The
home screens are obviously
large and clear with a 4.3 - inch display, and the extra estate means HTC can offer up massively functional
widgets or half sized versions of many of them so you can fit more onto your
home screen set up.
I use a single
home screen, with a
large portion dedicated to the Google Calendar
widget so I can always see what's happening at a glance.
A
large clock and weather
widget shows on the
home screen, with top six apps below it.