Having widgets stored away in the app drawer certainly will take some getting used to. But it's a good changeThanks!!!!! I can tell this will take some getting used to.
Open the app drawer - the ( ::: ) icon on the homescreen - and press-and-hold on an app icon. Then you choose where it goes on the screensI know in behind but how did you add an app shortcut to a screen?
Having widgets stored away in the app drawer certainly will take some getting used to. But it's a good change![]()
Actually I don't like long-press that much. In the places where long-press brings up the context menu for a specific item (like in Messaging, etc.) it makes perfect sense. Having to long-press on the home screen to find widgets is not intuitive, I'd say. If you think that getting to widgets by app drawer -> widgets tab is less useful or more time consuming than long-pressing the homescreen, hitting Widgets and waiting a moment for the list to come up, whatever floats your boat.I my opinion, it's a bad change. What was wrong with the long press on the home screen to access widgets, direct dial, etc? Having the long press on a home screen do nothing except something as frivolous as changing a wallpaper is a waste. The long press is intuitive, the app drawer is a buried, nested function...
Widgets -> Contact (or Direct dial in your case)
Widgets being the new section in the app drawer area