Any app to hibernate A.wear apps? - Moto 360

I have downladed an app manager for Android Wear where you can see wich apps are runing in the back, how much RAM etc and you can Stop them.
The problem is that after a while they start again and this consumes RAM and Battery.
Someone knows an app like Greenify wich hibernates those apps you are not using in this moment as in a Smartphone?
It would reduces Battery drain...
Thanks

Noneone interested in it ??

negriton said:
I have downladed an app manager for Android Wear where you can see wich apps are runing in the back, how much RAM etc and you can Stop them.
The problem is that after a while they start again and this consumes RAM and Battery.
Someone knows an app like Greenify wich hibernates those apps you are not using in this moment as in a Smartphone?
It would reduces Battery drain...
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you're already rooted and such you could always try sideloading Greenify. It does hibernate apps when rooted on the Moto 360 (at least it did on 5.0.2).

Related

[INFO] Why You Shouldn’t Use a Task Killer On Android

So i saw many posts on which people have asked as to which task killer should be used !
and then i stumble upon this site which provided me the details,
*I HAVE NOT WRITTEN THIS*
sources-by Chris Hoffman
http://www.howtogeek.com/127388/htg-explains-why-you-shouldnt-use-a-task-killer-on-android/
Android Doesn’t Manage Processes Like Windows
Most Android users are familiar with Windows. On Windows, many programs running at one time – whether they’re windows on your desktop or applications in your system tray – can decrease your computer’s performance. Closing applications when you’re not using them can help speed up your Windows computer.
However, Android isn’t Windows and doesn’t manage processes like Windows does. Unlike on Windows, where there’s an obvious way to close applications, there’s no obvious way to “close” an Android application. This is by design and isn’t a problem. When you leave an Android app, going back to your home screen or switching to another app, the app stays “running” in the background. In most cases, the app will be paused in the background, taking up no CPU or network resources. Some apps will continue using CPU and network resources in the background, of course – for example, music players, file-downloading programs, or apps that sync in the background.
When you go back to an app you were recently using, Android “unpauses” that app and you resume where you left off. This is fast because the app is still stored in your RAM and ready to be used again.
Why Task Killers Are Bad
Proponents of task killers notice that Android is using a lot of RAM – in fact, Android stores a lot of apps in its memory, filling up the RAM! However, that isn’t a bad thing. Apps stored in your RAM can be quickly switched to without Android having to load them from its slower storage.
In summary, you shouldn’t use a task killer – if you have a misbehaving app wasting resources in the background, you should identify it and uninstall it. But don’t just remove apps from your phone or tablet’s RAM – that doesn’t help speed anything up.
Empty RAM is useless. Full RAM is RAM that is being put to good use for caching apps. If Android needs more memory, it will force-quit an app that you haven’t used in a while – this all happens automatically, without installing any task killers.
Task killers think they know better than Android. They run in the background, automatically quitting apps and removing them from Android’s memory. They may also allow you to force-quit apps on your own, but you shouldn’t have to do this.
Task killers aren’t just useless – they can reduce performance. If a task killer removes an app from your RAM and you open that app again, the app will be slower to load as Android is forced to load it from your device’s storage. This will also use more battery power than if you just left the app in your RAM in the first place. Some apps will automatically restart after the task killer quits them, using more CPU and battery resources.
Whether RAM is empty or full, it takes the same amount of battery power – decreasing the amount of apps stored in RAM won’t improve your battery power or offer more CPU cycles.
hope u understood!
words of wisdom by fellow-mates
go into settings - apps and see how many running apps you have. now go to cached apps and see there, how many apps there are. you see? nearly 50% of those apps discovered by you in the processes are apps that you didn't opened ever but they are still opened and running. why? because that's how linux manages its resources. instead of having free ram for no use (what's the point of having 14gb of ram when you only use 1gb), linux fills all the ram blocks with useful apps or apps that you are running frequently so that when you call that app, it will bring it on the screen almost instantly. this my friend, is called multitasking.
and no, you are wrong. if you use a task killer killing the apps every 10 minutes, the cycles the whole system does - opening again apps and caching them, task killer closing them - results in much more functions done by CPU => more battery spent. even if you say that the battery life its the same, you are wrong. when using a task killer IT MIGHT drain your battery with 0.1% per hour. it's not that much, but IT EXIST.
oh and yeah, one thing: android has its own task killer. that's why you don't need one app to kill your other apps. because android its doing it by itself. if you don't believe me, strip down one kernel, open the init.rc file and find the values for task killer.
I understand this response, but I don't believe it. Task killers has always helped me in every matter. Even on a computer it helps greatly.
Conclusion: I noticed the same battery life using a Task Killer, than not using a task killer.
Sent from my HTC One V using Tapatalk 2
Curiousn00b said:
I understand this response, but I don't believe it. Task killers has always helped me in every matter. Even on a computer it helps greatly.
Conclusion: I noticed the same battery life using a Task Killer, than not using a task killer.
Sent from my HTC One V using Tapatalk 2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
you don't have to believe it. those are real facts. go into settings - apps and see how many running apps you have. now go to cached apps and see there, how many apps there are. you see? nearly 50% of those apps discovered by you in the processes are apps that you didn't opened ever but they are still opened and running. why? because that's how linux manages its resources. instead of having free ram for no use (what's the point of having 14gb of ram when you only use 1gb), linux fills all the ram blocks with useful apps or apps that you are running frequently so that when you call that app, it will bring it on the screen almost instantly. this my friend, is called multitasking.
and no, you are wrong. if you use a task killer killing the apps every 10 minutes, the cycles the whole system does - opening again apps and caching them, task killer closing them - results in much more functions done by CPU => more battery spent. even if you say that the battery life its the same, you are wrong. when using a task killer IT MIGHT drain your battery with 0.1% per hour. it's not that much, but IT EXIST.
oh and yeah, one thing: android has its own task killer. that's why you don't need one app to kill your other apps. because android its doing it by itself. if you don't believe me, strip down one kernel, open the init.rc file and find the values for task killer.
salve.
1ceb0x said:
you don't have to believe it. those are real facts. go into settings - apps and see how many running apps you have. now go to cached apps and see there, how many apps there are. you see? nearly 50% of those apps discovered by you in the processes are apps that you didn't opened ever but they are still opened and running. why? because that's how linux manages its resources. instead of having free ram for no use (what's the point of having 14gb of ram when you only use 1gb), linux fills all the ram blocks with useful apps or apps that you are running frequently so that when you call that app, it will bring it on the screen almost instantly. this my friend, is called multitasking.
and no, you are wrong. if you use a task killer killing the apps every 10 minutes, the cycles the whole system does - opening again apps and caching them, task killer closing them - results in much more functions done by CPU => more battery spent. even if you say that the battery life its the same, you are wrong. when using a task killer IT MIGHT drain your battery with 0.1% per hour. it's not that much, but IT EXIST.
oh and yeah, one thing: android has its own task killer. that's why you don't need one app to kill your other apps. because android its doing it by itself. if you don't believe me, strip down one kernel, open the init.rc file and find the values for task killer.
salve.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I hope u don't mind if I take some of ur message and put it in the op
Sent from my One V using xda app-developers app
That's great.. I liked the article. I qm giving you a thanks for it
Sent from my One V using xda app-developers app
cybervibin said:
I hope u don't mind if I take some of ur message and put it in the op
Sent from my One V using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
sure. no problem mate
soham_sss said:
That's great.. I liked the article. I qm giving you a thanks for it
Sent from my One V using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you
1ceb0x said:
sure. no problem mate
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sent from my One V using xda app-developers app
task killers were great before 1.6 but useless after that
Lloir said:
task killers were great before 1.6 but useless after that
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
+1 android has devloped a long way since!
cybervibin said:
Thank you
Sent from my One V using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
you're welcome!
I'm using task menager when is needed, and also I'm using custom system memory tweaks, it makes my phone running faster and smoother some apps knows to stuck and they keep the phone from entering deep sleep, and that drains the battery, so if you know what are you doing use task menager and customize when what apps the system should kill
Sent from my HTC One V
I have a task killer installed, but only use it manually, ie. if there's a stubborn app that's crashed/frozen/etc and just won't close and is eating the battery
donJim said:
I'm using task menager when is needed, and also I'm using custom system memory tweaks, it makes my phone running faster and smoother some apps knows to stuck and they keep the phone from entering deep sleep, and that drains the battery, so if you know what are you doing use task menager and customize when what apps the system should kill
Sent from my HTC One V
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Use auto run manager the answer to most of ur problems
qzfive said:
I have a task killer installed, but only use it manually, ie. if there's a stubborn app that's crashed/frozen/etc and just won't close and is eating the battery
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sent from my One V using xda app-developers app
yayyy so task killer only kills my battery
you got that right!
Good to know. Thanks

[Q] Greenify alternatives

Just rooted my phone & found that Greenify is not compatible with wonder GB 2.3.6
Any recommendation that give similar function as Greenify's?
Or what app should I used to minimize the RAM usage and spare it for better/faster performance?
Thank you for your help!
didn't know this before too...icic
I think you can use something like App Quarantine.
In the greenify thread http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2155737 there is some comparations (alternatives) to greenify. Now something that do exactly what greenify I don't think that exists.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/...vbS5lbHNkb2VyZmVyLmFuZHJvaWQuYXV0b3N0YXJ0cyJd

[Q]how to get rid of background apps

well the title said it. i have HOX unlocked and rooted with stock rom , the problem is there is alot of apps running in the back ground sucking my batter dry and filling my ram for no reason. i know there is alot of task mangers apps on the market (im using Advanced Task Manager Pro) it close all the apps running in the backround every 1 min, thats good but i want to stop the problem at it source. is there is a way to block the apps from even running in the first place?
im using :
Ds Battery Saver Pro (to save battery life)
Set Cpu (to control CPU clock thus save battery life)
Go to all apps in settings click the app and then disable.
Sent from my HTC One X using xda app-developers app
Thebommer said:
well the title said it. i have HOX unlocked and rooted with stock rom , the problem is there is alot of apps running in the back ground sucking my batter dry and filling my ram for no reason. i know there is alot of task mangers apps on the market (im using Advanced Task Manager Pro) it close all the apps running in the backround every 1 min, thats good but i want to stop the problem at it source. is there is a way to block the apps from even running in the first place?
im using :
Ds Battery Saver Pro (to save battery life)
Set Cpu (to control CPU clock thus save battery life)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
try greenify app
tried greenify unfortunately it did nothing at all
Thebommer said:
tried greenify unfortunately it did nothing at all
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Should have, I've been using it for over a month and it did wonders for my battery. Did you hit the little plus button in the lower right hand corner. That's how you add apps that you want to "greenify".
Sent from my Kinologified thingy

[Q] RAM is at 2GB of 3GB ??

I have noticed that im using up 2gb of ram. But i have only downloaded a few apps. No games. All the stuff i had before. My old phone was a little over 1gb total. Is this normal. Does the phone uses a lot of ram out of the box. Im thinking of rooting just so i can free up some ram. Not sure if that is possible. Im coming from a galaxy and very happy with this d851 g3.
Anyone having a memory problem ? Issues? What can i do?
Android always runs while using up as much ram as possible. Thats normal, if your phone had 8gb of ram, most likely it would also be using most of it up.
Makes app switching faster.......
All that bloatware runs in the background contributing to a high ram usage
nohcho said:
All that bloatware runs in the background contributing to a high ram usage
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not completely true. I disabled most of the T-Mobile and LG crap on this phone and it's still using the same amount of RAM. It's Android's memory management.
I bet if the Android team could go back in time in the early days of system development they would have probably removed the ability to see free ram. So many people get caught up in free ram when the phone is using the available ram to the best of its ability.
Windows does alot of the same as well. Even though if you go into task manager it shows free if you actually look at your system resourses it shows alot of it is taken.
Unused RAM is wasted RAM.
Not sure about the whole 2g for 3gb thing but your system need all the rams it can use to keep your phone running smoothly. If you use ram cleaner (so they are call) you will notice your phone goes through a gitter before it it can pick up again. You look 5 minute later, its like you never clean anything.
and tmobile is surely 3g
Free RAM is wasted RAM.
Android uses RAM differently from say Windows. Android will use as much ram as available and when it needs more, it will free it up as needed. This is normal.
So yea i installed greenify and it made a **** load of a difference because i have like 40 games and a load of other apps. I have less than 1.5 gigs used now. And my phones way smoother and batterylife is good again
Sent from my LG-D851 using XDA Premium 4 mobile app
brolic925t said:
So yea i installed greenify and it made a **** load of a difference because i have like 40 games and a load of other apps. I have less than 1.5 gigs used now. And my phones way smoother and batterylife is good again
Sent from my LG-D851 using XDA Premium 4 mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Don't worry you're about to see that battery life drop like a rock. Constantly killing apps will kill your battery fast. Greenify is a nice app if you have a crap phone but your G3 was made the way it is for a reason. What you think is smooth and fast is actually hurting your phone. Don't believe me, Google it and do some research. I do not recommend anyone using any format of task killer or ram optimizer on a phone that is current with the times.
Do I think the phone has issues. yes. When using it the apps don't close when ram is needed. Only fix is a reboot or kill the app but at times that does not work
Jammol said:
Don't worry you're about to see that battery life drop like a rock. Constantly killing apps will kill your battery fast. Greenify is a nice app if you have a crap phone but your G3 was made the way it is for a reason. What you think is smooth and fast is actually hurting your phone. Don't believe me, Google it and do some research. I do not recommend anyone using any format of task killer or ram optimizer on a phone that is current with the times.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Don't worry Jammol doesn't know what he is talking about. Greenify doesn't hurt battery life and performance like a task killer because isn't a task killer. It is completely different. I agree that task killers should be renamed to battery/phone performance killers but Greenify is very different.
First of all it requires your phone to be rooted. Assuming that it is, it uses special permissions from the rooted device to essentially freeze the app unless it is opened by the user. For example, I use facebook but only casually. I look at it once every other day or so but have noticed that the push notifications and messenger uses a lot of battery because it does a partial wake everytime it pushes a update which activates the internet and cpu.
The solution is to "Greenify" the app. The app still loads normally when I open it up although, because it is not in the ram, it likely takes slightly longer to load. Once it is opened, I can use it like normal and I get push notifications again until my phone's screen goes off. Once the screen goes off, facebook and all the apps that I "Greenify" are flushed from the memory and are banned/essentially frozen until I launch the respective app again. The only drawback to this is that you essentially never get push notifications for the apps but it saves a lot of battery if you pick the apps that you don't care much about/rarely use.
So greenify does work really well. Today my phone had 17% left. I it had 16+ hours of battery time total. I got 4.25 hours of SOT with sync on (with 3 email accounts getting push notifications plus other apps), GPS high accuracy, LG health automatically recording my exercise, and 1 hour of navigation with Waze. Basically I used my phone how I wanted and didn't micromanage my battery usage throughout the day at all.
I used 3 battery saving tools. 1. ART 2. Greenify and 3. Custom Kernel V002 from KAsp3rd. These three are very powerful together.
I hope that helps someone!
ART
CAP3r5 said:
Don't worry Jammol doesn't know what he is talking about. Greenify doesn't hurt battery life and performance like a task killer because isn't a task killer. It is completely different. I agree that task killers should be renamed to battery/phone performance killers but Greenify is very different.
First of all it requires your phone to be rooted. Assuming that it is, it uses special permissions from the rooted device to essentially freeze the app unless it is opened by the user. For example, I use facebook but only casually. I look at it once every other day or so but have noticed that the push notifications and messenger uses a lot of battery because it does a partial wake everytime it pushes a update which activates the internet and cpu.
The solution is to "Greenify" the app. The app still loads normally when I open it up although, because it is not in the ram, it likely takes slightly longer to load. Once it is opened, I can use it like normal and I get push notifications again until my phone's screen goes off. Once the screen goes off, facebook and all the apps that I "Greenify" are flushed from the memory and are banned/essentially frozen until I launch the respective app again. The only drawback to this is that you essentially never get push notifications for the apps but it saves a lot of battery if you pick the apps that you don't care much about/rarely use.
So greenify does work really well. Today my phone had 17% left. I it had 16+ hours of battery time total. I got 4.25 hours of SOT with sync on (with 3 email accounts getting push notifications plus other apps), GPS high accuracy, LG health automatically recording my exercise, and 1 hour of navigation with Waze. Basically I used my phone how I wanted and didn't micromanage my battery usage throughout the day at all.
I used 3 battery saving tools. 1. ART 2. Greenify and 3. Custom Kernel V002 from KAsp3rd. These three are very powerful together.
I hope that helps someone!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Out of curiosity, how are you using art with xposed? Greenify uses the xposed framework.
Sent from my LG-D851 using XDA Free mobile app
Harmtan2 said:
Out of curiosity, how are you using art with xposed? Greenify uses the xposed framework.
Sent from my LG-D851 using XDA Free mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am not using xposed. Greenify works just fine for me without xposed. If you want some of the more advanced and experimental features, you need xposed but the basic functionality does not require it..
CAP3r5 said:
I am not using xposed. Greenify works just fine for me without xposed. If you want some of the more advanced and experimental features, you need xposed but the basic functionality does not require it..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Aww that man's sense. I want to ruin art, I just don't want to give up my xposed features lol.
Sent from my LG-D851 using XDA Free mobile app
Harmtan2 said:
Aww that man's sense. I want to ruin art, I just don't want to give up my xposed features lol.
Sent from my LG-D851 using XDA Free mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I know what you mean! This is just the latest skirmish in the never ending war between features and battery/performance. I can't wait for Android L to come out because this particular battle will end (xposed will support android L which uses ART exclusively) but the war will rage on..

better then greenify

Guys as I have used Greenify app for a long time on my rooted phone and I know o havent rooted my op5t knowing Greenify won't work as good as on a rooted phone so I tried a different app named servicely this servicely app has stopped many background processes way better than Greenify without root
Really happy with this service me app without root what it if I root my phone and use full features of services earlier I used to have only 1.5 GB of RAM free on my op 5t 6gb variant but now I have nearly 2 to 2.5 GB free
Long story Short Service Lee is a better app as compared to Greenify
shunil.scorpio01 said:
Guys as I have used Greenify app for a long time on my rooted phone and I know o havent rooted my op5t knowing Greenify won't work as good as on a rooted phone so I tried a different app named servicely this servicely app has stopped many background processes way better than Greenify without root
Really happy with this service me app without root what it if I root my phone and use full features of services earlier I used to have only 1.5 GB of RAM free on my op 5t 6gb variant but now I have nearly 2 to 2.5 GB free
Long story Short Service Lee is a better app as compared to Greenify
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I do not understand how the app could work with your unrooted phone as the developer has clearly stated that "First of all make sure you're ROOTED (it won't work otherwise)." (see the description in Play Store). If you see any imporvements while using the app without root, then it must be placebo. :laugh:
helper85 said:
I do not understand how the app could work with your unrooted phone as the developer has clearly stated that "First of all make sure you're ROOTED (it won't work otherwise)." (see the description in Play Store). If you see any imporvements while using the app without root, then it must be placebo. :laugh:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My phone is new and on stock trust ..me y would i lie
In Greenify we have to hibernate apps manually as they wake up frequently but in case servicely its not .it keep the background clean see i have an app called. Mochats for. Parrellel apps it used to run like mad on background but now not even single services in background 1000 star's to dev
Servicely has its own thread. Here's the last comment. https://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=76488342&postcount=701
With Oreo, which is quite efficient on its own, apps like Greenify, Force Doze, Servicely, Amplify, and Naptime won't help your battery life much except for taming a rogue app (or two) that's constantly chewing up battery in the background. Ever since Marshmallow with its built-in doze feature, the need for these so-called battery saving apps has dropped significantly with each new android OS. Most, if any "savings" are placebo, and without root, you're dreaming, OP.

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