On Jan 15, 2016, at 4:23 PM, Davidcee Groups davidcee_groups@yahoo.com [iPad] <iPad@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
I went to a class on iOS devices recently & the instructor said that went you update an app the size grows because many developers are basically lazy & don't rewrite the app & delete junk. Instead they just add the new stuff on top of existing code. Don't know but humans tend to take the easy way.
On Jan 14, 2016, at 12:33 PM, Alice Saunders lwr32@mac.com [iPad] <iPad@yahoogroups.com> wrote:You can turn off automatically update apps and update the apps manually one by one.
\\ /\( ) Alice.( ). lwr32@mac.comI, too, have had the same issue with both my iPhone 6S and my iPad Air 2. I have noticed that since iOS 9 came out, updating apps can cause all sorts of problems. At first, all of my apps would not update. After the latest update of iOS that latest update went away. But when I first activate my phone in the morning, for example, iOS wants to start automatically updating the apps. I have a 128 GB iPhone and iPad and I have a couple of hundred of apps loaded (iPad has more). So when your iPad tries to update 10-15 apps at once it generally bogs down your system.
You could try turning wifi on and off (if your iPad is wifi) and it might stop all the updates or just wait a bit.
One would think the top of the line hardware would be better but I think with the updated processors now on the devices, app developers have taken full advantage and there is a lack of system memory.
Just my thoughts.
Posted by: David Smith <david.smith.14916@gmail.com>
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