Apps and Multitasking
The Droid X is great at multitasking—running more than one app at a time. For example, you can browse the Web while you listen to music, receive email, and have Facebook updates delivered to you, all without breaking a sweat.
You usually don’t know that Android is multitasking, though, because unlike in operating systems like Windows or Mac OS X, you can’t see all running apps simultaneously or switch between them through such simple means as using Windows’ Alt-Tab keystroke. Instead, you tap the app’s icon.
When you’re in an app and want to do something else on the Droid X, you typically press the Home key. From there, you can tap to run an app such as the web browser, or open the Application Tray to run more apps. When you do that, though, that first app is still running in the background. If it’s a music-playing app or a radio app, it keeps playing until you close it. With many other apps, though, at some point the Droid X will notice that you haven’t used it in a while and close it down. You won’t even notice that the Droid X has closed it.
Note
You can find apps called task killers that claim to speed up your Droid X by automatically closing apps when they’re no longer needed, or by letting you manually close those apps. Most everyone agrees that the apps are superfluous—the Android operating system does an excellent job of closing apps when they’re no longer needed. Not only that, but many task killers won’t run with the latest version of the Android operating ...
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