Share screenshots with a few keystrokes. Swap files with teammates and clients quickly and securely. Showcase your work straight outta the Adobe suite with a key command. Customize it all to showcase your brand.

Droplr was made for creative collaboration, for sharing ideas and inspiration with your team and clients. And now it’s even better. We just made creating and building teams a cinch, updated our pricing, and redesigned our dashboard. Check it out.

Oh, and new customers get 50% off a year of service this week: https://droplr.com/p/lightsaber

* * *

My thanks to Droplr for sponsoring the site this week. Long-time readers of this site will know I’m a huge fan of Droplr and that it is one of my most-used Mac utility apps. Highly recommended.

Sponsor: Droplr – 50% off simple file sharing for creative teams

Speaking of intentional iPhone Home screens, Jake Knapp made his iPhone as “dumb” as possible last year and it’s going quite well:

I wanted to get control, but I didn’t want to give up my iPhone altogether. I loved having Google Maps and Uber and Find Friends and an amazing camera.

So I decided to try an experiment. I disabled Safari. I deleted my mail account. I uninstalled every app I couldn’t handle. I thought I’d try it for a week.

“Infinity in My Pocket Was Too Much”

This week’s interview is with Norwegian student, Eivind Hjertnes:

My home screen is organised a little bit differently than what I see most other people do. The only apps I have are the apps I use all the time or need to access very fast.

I like to think that my iPhone’s first Home screen is organized much like Eivind’s — that the apps on my Home screen are the ones I actually use regularly. But part of me wonders if I’m just so used to my Home screen apps that these are actually only the apps I think I use every day.

For fun, I’ve been taking a screenshot of my iPhone’s Home screen on the first of every month. I started doing this back in March 2013. Below is my iPhone’s first Home screen as of March 1, 2013, and next to it is my Home screen as of yesterday. As you can see, only three apps are swapped out and most apps are still in the same place. The biggest changes are to the aesthetics of the iOS Springboard and icons.

iPhone Home screens

Eivind Hjertnes’ iPhone Setup