If you want to 'create' with your phone, why not use the feature it has which is actually as good as [and in some aspects better than] the equivalent 'proper' equipment. ie. the camera.
I'm a keen amateur photographer and have actually sold my SLR and compact cameras and now use my phone for 100% of my photography. It may lack some of the capabilities of my proper cameras, but [like most modern phone cameras] it's very good indeed and light years ahead of the equipment many of history's greatest photographers had access to, in their time. And, as the famous quote says; "The best camera is the one you have with you"
[and who of us leaves the house without our phones, these days?]
Next time you're thumb-twiddling somewhere, why not set yourself a photography project to kill the time:
* Find and photograph 'faces' in everyday objects
* Pick a random word [for example off a billboard] and take photos on that 'theme'
* Pretend you're a news photographer and record 'stories' on your journey to wherever you're going
* Photograph some everyday objects from weird angles and see if your mates can recognise them
* Try and find some 'beauty' in decay; dilapidated buildings, rubbish, grafitti, etc.
....and so on.
I think OP is thinking along the following lines: I’m on the bus / in the loo / waiting for my lunch to heat in the microwave. How can I use these moments to produce creatively? I already have a great tool that I know can deliver content efficiently and accessibly to me in these situations—I use my phone here already. But are there any ways to change my behavior to not flick through another feed, but actually advance my own creative goals?
Successfully being a creative person isn’t a matter of ‘tear it all down and start from scratch.’ It’s important to use the resources that are already available to us!
For my part, I wish it was easier to write long form quickly. Writing this on an iPad keyboard just now sucked—light years less efficient than on my computer keyboard. And my phone is even worse! But I often want to journal in bed or write fiction away from my desk. Are there better ways to input lots of text quickly?
- listen to podcasts and take notes, which I then turn into mini mind maps (it helps me remember concepts and linking ideas together)
- I do brand and marketing work, so I often use phone time to doodle early logo concepts, draft storyboards, start composing shots for photo shoots... etc. I find the constraints of the small screen quite interesting as it obliges me to veer towards simpler designs (I use Google Keep which allows for zooming in and out easily, and seamlessly integrates with the laptop version)
- whiteboarding (again in Google Keep or Miro) is also something I love to do on a phone, usually for processes and/or identity systems where I’d collate references for a projects into a single document for future use
- photo editing / story editing using VSCO and Over is a great way to use phone time productively. I often prepare visuals for blog posts or social stories that way,
- financial planning (probably less creative than the rest, but also a good way to spend phone time and many workflows are actually faster on mobile): I use a virtual bank (Monzo, in the U.K.) so I use phone time to label/categorise spend, visualise budgets, pay anything that needs paying and create simpler invoices with a Google Sheet template and pdf exports to Dropbox
Many more options, but these are my major uses. Looking forward to reading the other answers!
The second problem is that most mobile devices are walled gardens that don't allow you full access to your pocket computer's sensors and filesystem. This makes piping the output of one program into another (even say an editor, to email or a compiler) difficult, to say the least. In this case you really need to jailbreak your phone, or purchase an open option such as a PinePhone.
When you're creating anything, it makes sense to do it in the best possible environment that you have for it - I would rather write code on a laptop instead of using a phone and I would pick a desktop computer over the laptop. Phones are rarely the best environment for any creative task apart from maybe pictures, videos, vlogs and other social media stuff (if we can put those in the creative category).
And lastly, consuming can work efficiently too - I would make the distinction between mindless- and mindful-tasks. Watching Netflix is mostly mindless, while viewing educational content could be mindful (could be video but better yet text)
Alternatively, you could use a Mosh client, but with how fast modern phones are, it would be kind of a waste.
I don't draw, but I know doing it on a touch screen is far more painful than paper.
I think alternative input devices are a must, at which point you might as well just use a laptop. That might not be practical if you're on-the-go e.g. riding the bus. If you're not, then why use a phone?
Mobiles have a pretty great ecosystem of audio creation apps. Standard synths and sequencers abound, and there are lots of weirdo instruments to play with too. Using Audiobus or AUM lets you drop effects onto audio synths (or any sound source really) and control them via sequencers (check out Fugue Machine), most apps support this. It’s a lot like playing with modular synths, and you can stick GarageBand or some other DAW at the end to record your improvised sessions; I believe some can do multitrack recording as well.
I bought an iPad Pro back in 2016 specifically for music production. I got a lot of mileage in particular out of Loopy, the most versatile loop “pedal” I’ve ever seen. $5 gets you a 12-track looper/mixer with an intuitive touch interface and lots of advanced features. It’s iOS only though.
One thing that can be done effectively is recording. Whether it's recording a video or audio, modern smart phone is better than cameras in terms of usability. I don't edit on the phone though. It's still too small a screen to be comfortable.
I also want to point out that not all consumption is unproductive. If you are reading/watching videos critically, it's a very enriching experience. You can learn a new recipe, analyze some music, etc.
Reading emails, sending important texts, making reservations, etc., especially if you are going to do it at some point anyway, are also productive.
From the basic 'notes' app included in all phones for creative writing, to the camera for photography, to FL studio app for music.
Not only for you, but for myself and many other people who like to 'make stuff', a good tech/ social media detox to spark some imagination is the only thing I think will truly get you being creative (myself included). The paradox of choice out there, coupled with instant gratification is a productivity/ creativity killer...get that imagination firing again!
Here is a gallery of ~1 minute abstract videos with custom soundtracks. The apps I used were LumaFusion, Synthscaper, Fieldscaper, Defekt, FilterStack, Fragment, Kino Glitch, 8mm, Hyperspektiv, Plotagraph, and Virtual ANS.
https://lucidbeaming.com/glitch/
Here is a music video for U.K. metal band DAMIM that was made entirely on my phone.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6OZVXYamOQ
I have also used the phone as a movement based MIDI controller with AC Sabre and arpeggiator with Fugue Machine.
An old code project was to make a phone based web app to control Zynaddsubfx (synthesizer) running on a Raspberry Pi. Fun learning project for Node.
If you have a powerful processor and adequate RAM - you can do almost any thing that you do on desktop/pc
Not sure about iOS, but on Android there are fantastic apps like Glitch Lab, Mirror Lab, and so on. Here is a link to art made on Android using Mirror Lab: https://www.instagram.com/mirror_lab/
To create you could use your phone’s camera to record and post videos, you could do some writing maybe even use speech to text conversion, there are various synths you can get for phones. I personally use apps for astronomy and workouts which is about as productive as I get on my phone.
If you want to update one of the synths in a song you are working on, use your workstation.
If you want to procrastinate and waste time, then obsess over using your phone to do something it was never designed to do
i listen to audiobooks constantly when i walking or gardening or practicing my punches.
but here is my favourite: i am learning astrology and i have downloaded an astrology app which gives me info at the fingertips..something that would have been pretty unthinkable a few years ago. there is a technique called prashna with indian vedic astrology. you can make predictions based on the positions of planets at that exact second when a question is posed. you dont need to know anything about any person's birthtime etc. it is the astrology of 'that moment' in time..not a person.
so far, this has only been theory from the books. experienced astrologers good in math can calculate in a jiffy. not for the newbies or the students. they can also tell the time by watching shadows..not everyone of us can do that. anyways.. now we can test it and draw prashna charts on demand to learn and cross check. i know there arent a lot of astrology buffs here..much less indian astrology. but as a student of jyotish and i am sure for others who have more experience w/astrology too, this is a game changer. and now we can conduct more research and test everything from the reams of ancient texts. it is very exciting.
To add to some of the already good comments:
* Writing and thinking. The kind that starts in one place and takes you somewhere more interesting. E.g., "Think up 5 different ways a user might achieve X."
* Other adjacent/admin tasks that don't require a computer. E.g., cleaning out Trello
* Studying. I've used YouTube and a Flashcards app
- Use with larger screen as a thin client to cloud