On the iPhone, swiping down from the left side of the screen brings up notifications, while swiping down from the right opens the Control Center. But how exactly are these zones defined? What if you swipe down from the middle of the screen? You're trying to check your notifications, but end up in the Control Center instead. Okay, now you want to see your notifications. You swipe down on the left side of the screen. But if the gesture isn't long enough, the notification shade just snaps back. So how far do you need to swipe? Is it two-thirds? A little more? A little less? Now, suppose you want to toggle Wi-Fi from the quick settings. Swiping down slightly opens the first Control Center page, while a longer swipe reveals the second page (e.g., media controls). How can you precisely control your swipe to reliably land on the first page for Wi-Fi, without accidentally triggering the second page with the music player? On Android, this is incredibly simple: swiping down from anywhere—left, right, or center—always opens the quick settings panel. If there are multiple pages, you navigate between them with horizontal swipes. Notifications work the same way. No accidental triggers. Fuck Apple. Rubbish Apple.