I hate the way Google has implemented Split Screen as I am a user who kills all their recent apps frequently as I feel it affects battery life. Why couldn't Google adopt Samsung's latest design layout for Split Screen?
Is there an application available which makes it more similar to Samsung or LG's Split Screen experience.
kalinskym said:
I am a user who kills all their recent apps frequently as I feel it affects battery life.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You realize that actually makes battery life worse, right?
josephcsible said:
You realize that actually makes battery life worse, right?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
removing it from recent apps by swiping right? I hate keeping apps such as Facebook opened in the background or Chrome.
kalinskym said:
removing it from recent apps by swiping right? I hate keeping apps such as Facebook opened in the background or Chrome.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Does it really drain battery life quicker by killing them from recent apps
kalinskym said:
removing it from recent apps by swiping right? I hate keeping apps such as Facebook opened in the background or Chrome.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
kalinskym said:
Does it really drain battery life quicker by killing them from recent apps
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, doing that hurts battery life. The reason is that keeping an app on memory doesn't use any extra battery, and having to restart a killed one does.
josephcsible said:
Yes, doing that hurts battery life. The reason is that keeping an app on memory doesn't use any extra battery, and having to restart a killed one does.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Even Facebook? I should keep Facebook open in the background rather than having it closed. How many apps do you typically have opened when you go to recent apps view?
A few apps do leave stuff running, but Doze and App Standby will take care of that for the most part. That way is nicer to the battery since it suspends the processes rather than killing them, so they don't have to reinitialize when you do reopen the app.
Related
Android is praised for having 'real' multitasking. But why does it have to 'suck' on a phone with 1GB memory?
Chrome starts to reload 3-4 tabs only if it's the only app 'opened' (of course there are other background services. but I don't have much running services, map, google messaging service, keyboard, )
I think it could also be problem with app. app not releasing memory resource when goes to background.
But it's really annoying to see that apps activity needs to be created again from scratch after opening a few apps.
Please discuss your opinion here.
Bayint Naung said:
Android is praised for having 'real' multitasking. But why does it have to 'suck' on a phone with 1GB memory?
Chrome starts to reload 3-4 tabs only if it's the only app 'opened' (of course there are other background services. but I don't have much running services, map, google messaging service, keyboard, )
I think it could also be problem with app. app not releasing memory resource when goes to background.
But it's really annoying to see that apps activity needs to be created again from scratch after opening a few apps.
Please discuss your opinion here.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No problems here..
try to avoid apps with high memory usage, one being the Facebook app
crixley said:
No problems here..
try to avoid apps with high memory usage, one being the Facebook app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't have facebook running as I've said earlier. I don't even have it installed.
But I"m still not convinced that it's the BEST android multitasking could have. it's too aggressively killing background activity..
Bayint Naung said:
I don't have facebook running as I've said earlier. I don't even have it installed.
But I"m still not convinced that it's the BEST android multitasking could have. it's too aggressively killing background activity..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Get autokiller from the market and adjust the settings then. You want lower numbers in the app to allow more applications to stay active. Note that some apps might just kill background memory use, there's nothing you can do about that one.
Doing this might make your phone more laggy. You need to decide for yourself what the best trade-off is for you.
When exactly does it do it? I have 5 tabs open and I'm good! Is it after a while of inactivity?
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
I have never noticed this issue.
Sent from my other android devive using Tapatalk 2
z06mike said:
When exactly does it do it? I have 5 tabs open and I'm good! Is it after a while of inactivity?
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's not a refresh (like refresh web page), I think it's just re-rendered from the cache..
even though I'm android fan, I'm jealous how iOS manage to run pretty well for daily use with 512MB... probably dalvik JIT is culprit here?
I personally think this is a problem with chrome and this is the reason I don't like chrome because it runs a constant large service at 70+ mb at all times which takes away from general multitasking of the phone. My guess is this is related to your problem. Persistent services on android are rather powerful and when one is too large it has detrimental effects. Maybe others don't experience this with chrome, but I did, and that's why I stopped using it.
Yes, chrome is worse than stock browser.
Stock can maintain usually 4-5 tabs easily without reloading.
Hopefully Google could do something with both chrome and improve OS multitasking capability.
What's a good app or way to close all apps at once?
Sent from my Nexus 4 using xda app-developers app
mario24601 said:
What's a good app or way to close all apps at once?
Sent from my Nexus 4 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Press the Home button.
irishtexmex said:
Press the Home button.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
lol apps dont close when you press the home button smart one. and op if you click the multi-window button(the one on the right of home button) you can swipe them all away really fast but dont really know about all at once
FaDeGFX said:
lol apps dont close when you press the home button smart one. and op if you click the multi-window button(the one on the right of home button) you can swipe them all away really fast but dont really know about all at once
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes was hoping for an all close at once type app. Had that on iPhone thought might have something similar.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using xda app-developers app
There are 3rd party app killers in the play store. Check there...
There was a stock task manager...but I guess Google removed it for JB
Sent from my Nexus 4 using xda app-developers app
App killer
Cyanogenmod 10.1 has a button on the multitasking menu to do that. But it's kinda pointless except to clear the list of recently used apps. Android, if my understanding is correct, automatically fills the memory with tasks so killing apps is worse than pointless since you're just causing the system to prioritize unused background processes over the ones that you use more often.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
irishtexmex said:
Press the Home button.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You should listen to this guy. I know you're coming from a different OS, so you aren't aware of how Android deals with memory. The system is very good at multitasking. Apps that have been idling in the background will be pushed out and won't consume resources or ramp up your CPU. By killing those apps, you force the system to have to reload and process resources necessary to start the app. Android will keep enough of the resources to quickly fire up the app, but restrict activity so that your battery is pretty much unaffected.
An analogy if you need it: Android will bookmark and close whatever you were reading. That way, you can move the book around or leave it on the shelf and quickly pick it up and continue from the last page you were on. You are requesting that the system instead just closes the book, and buries it in a box with other books, and which is located in the attic. It takes more resources to find the book and locate the page again. Just let Android do its thing. Any popular dev will tell you the same thing.
TL;DNR - Don't use a task killer, you will get far better battery life and performance if you let the system deal with system resources.
FaDeGFX said:
lol apps dont close when you press the home button smart one. and op if you click the multi-window button(the one on the right of home button) you can swipe them all away really fast but dont really know about all at once
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Don't listen to this guy. He used the phrase "smart one," which I haven't heard since I was in elementary school (and I thought it was un-clever and uselessly sarcastic then). He also thinks that swiping away apps from the recents menu kills them. This is not how Android works. AOKP devs will not implement a recents menu that actually does let you swipe to kill apps because it's a useless feature that does more harm than good (zero benefit, actually). Just trust that your system knows how to handle its resources.
TL;DNR - Swiping away apps from the recents menu doesn't kill them. Stop trying to kill apps; only do so if they're unresponsive.
If u really want it, aokp has this feature
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 2
reboot?
Hung0702 said:
You should listen to this guy. I know you're coming from a different OS, so you aren't aware of how Android deals with memory. The system is very good at multitasking. Apps that have been idling in the background will be pushed out and won't consume resources or ramp up your CPU. By killing those apps, you force the system to have to reload and process resources necessary to start the app. Android will keep enough of the resources to quickly fire up the app, but restrict activity so that your battery is pretty much unaffected.
An analogy if you need it: Android will bookmark and close whatever you were reading. That way, you can move the book around or leave it on the shelf and quickly pick it up and continue from the last page you were on. You are requesting that the system instead just closes the book, and buries it in a box with other books, and which is located in the attic. It takes more resources to find the book and locate the page again. Just let Android do its thing. Any popular dev will tell you the same thing.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Let's say I start loading a web page and quickly jump to another app before it's loaded, then when I return to Chrome the page is ready and waiting. Doesn't this imply that apps are not just simply bookmarked and closed, but may remain active in the background? I am asking, not saying btw.
1234568 said:
Let's say I start loading a web page and quickly jump to another app before it's loaded, then when I return to Chrome the page is ready and waiting. Doesn't this imply that apps are not just simply bookmarked and closed, but may remain active in the background? I am asking, not saying btw.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Foreground apps are told that they are no longer in view, but are allowed to keep running if they wish. The OS will stop them if the memory is needed - which with 2GB is not very often on the nexus 4!
So Hung0702 was wrong on the last page when he said:
Apps that have been idling in the background will be pushed out and won't consume resources or ramp up your CPU
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It seems as though background apps can use resources and may have a negative impact on battery. Now I have got to the bottom of this I also want a clear all button!
1234568 said:
So Hung0702 was wrong on the last page when he said:
It seems as though background apps can use resources and may have a negative impact on battery. Now I have got to the bottom of this I also want a clear all button!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, they can keep using resources in the background. However, they will usually not keep the cpu awake unless they have an actual background service, so they will not stop the device from sleeping. As far as I know this is not enforced, but most apps will release the wakelock when told to pause by the OS (because the app is now hidden). This means they shouldn't have much impact on battery life.
You can see what is currently running by going to Settings -> Apps and select the Running tab. The recent apps list is not the same - most will have actually closed when you hid them.
A phone even with killer looks and amazing features still needs a descent battery backup to support it all. In past we've seen that a few tricks here and there always tend to increase battery life. Usually that includes disabling a few apps or features. This thread is for specifically targeting such tips & tricks and sharing it all so that S6 Edge+ can live upto its expectations..
1. To start with, lets get to the list of bloatwares that can be safely disabled.
If any of you own the AT&T version, here's a list you can disable:-
AT&T Apps:-
AT&T FamilyMap
AT&T Hot Spots
AT&T Live
AT&T Locker
AT&T Mail
AT&T Mobile Locate
AT&T Mobile Transfer
AT&T Navigator
AT&T Ready2Go
AT&T Smart Wi-Fi
Drive Mode
Caller Name ID
Mobile TV
Plenti
Smart Limits
Yp (Yellow Pages)
Other Apps:-
S Voice
Amazon (I prefer the playstore version for frequent updates)
Amazon Kindle
Device Help
Live Weather (Yahoo)
Lookout
Theme Store
Visual Voicemail
2. Refrain from using any free application that has embedded advertisements. They tend to run threads in background to load adds and thus degrade the app performance and used data (so naturally consume more power too). Either buy add-free version or find an alternate app for same purpose and without adds.
3. Disable notifications from social media/news apps like Facebook, Twitter, Tapatalk, etc. Although, the phone wouldn't be that smart if all the notifications are disabled, however, keep them at bare minimum. Not everybody would be interested in notifications from all the apps, so spend some time analyzing through all the installed apps and their settings to turn off the notifications for the apps you do not need to get notifications for. There are several apps that keep sending notifications and running a thread in background which again checks internet to load the notification content. An example would be games like Candy Crush or Clash Of Clans.
4. Turn off "Send Usage Statistics" or "Help Improve the app performance", "Participate in improvement" etc settings from the app which sends data from your device from time to time which acts as a survey to improve the performance of the app. Although this is a necessary option for a developer, however, if you do not care about your granular contribution towards further development of the app, try deselecting such options while setting up new apps.
5. Refrain from using external Memory Management Apps and RAM Cleaners. They tend to run heavy background services to detect memory usage and kill applications. Trust me, you would be better without them.
6. Try using black wallpaper and lock screen. Also, always select Dark Mode if any app has theme section. This makes the pixels produce less brightness and considerably save more battery.
7. Keep GPS Location off when not using any navigational/location based apps. When the GPS is ON, there are some apps that tend to acquire a GPS Lock even though they can work without it. Keeping GPS Off will not allow such apps to request for GPS Lock. GPS Locking is a battery draining process.
8. You can use certain tools like Greenify, WiFi Automatic, etc. to automatically manage application states or phone wireless to save some additional battery. Use these only if you are lazy like me. Otherwise you can always manually turn on/off wifi/bluetooth/nfc etc etc. Also, there are tools (like Juice Defender) which can enable/disable data connective at a frequent interval which results in really good power conservation without loosing push notification.
With applying most of these settings, I'm getting 6-7 hrs of screen on time very easily even when I've downloaded 1+ GB data and 40 minutes of video chat (hangout). Not to mention the usual gaming and application usage.:cyclops:
I hope that helps. I'll keep adding if I get any (without root).
Reserved for future use!
.....
apurva.giri said:
A phone even with killer looks and amazing features still needs a descent battery backup to support it all. In past we've seen that a few tricks here and there always tend to increase battery life. Usually that includes disabling a few apps or features. This thread is for specifically targeting such tips & tricks and sharing it all so that S6 Edge+ can live upto its expectations..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Tweak brightness.
I believe rooting a phone can improve its battery life. This method works for almost all devices.
st8chic said:
I believe rooting a phone can improve its battery life. This method works for almost all devices.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm sure you mean rooting and installing all sorts of battery saving items/tweaking.
Marely rooting wouldn't bring any difference to battery life for sure!
Just tweak brightness, make sure you getting good signal and use WiFi when available, don't leave Abby of the radio on unless not using it and that shall be good I guess
Sent from my SM-G900H using XDA Free mobile app
How can you disable those apps. I'm on T Mobile but we have our share of T Mobile bloat. Would love to disable a bunch of them without customizing my files lol
edo101 said:
How can you disable those apps. I'm on T Mobile but we have our share of T Mobile bloat. Would love to disable a bunch of them without customizing my files lol
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just long press the app in the app drawer and drag it up to where it says disable.
WizeGuyDezignz said:
Just long press the app in the app drawer and drag it up to where it says disable.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What is an app drawer lol?
edo101 said:
What is an app drawer lol?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's the icon on the lower right corner of the screen that says "Apps". Once you get in there find the app that you want to disable. Long press the icon of the app and drag it to the upper left corner of the screen where it says "Disable". Then when the "Disable" word lights up red just release the app into there.
Check out my screenshot for an example.
WizeGuyDezignz said:
It's the icon on the lower right corner of the screen that says "Apps". Once you get in there find the app that you want to disable. Long press the icon of the app and drag it to the upper left corner of the screen where it says "Disable". Then when the "Disable" word lights up red just release the app into there.
Check out my screenshot for an example.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Got it!, and Thanked. I'm actually on a Note Edge on 5.0, just moved back down to 4.4.4, it doesn't show up as disable.
hiteshonline said:
Tweak brightness.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Tweak brightness is its pmajor problem.......
Thanks for the listing. I love the new design than S6 edge, hopefully it will last longer as well...
Please tell me a solution if any one knows:
I open facebook and after some time i close this application by click on list tasks soft key and close it. Immediately when I go into setting > application manager > running apps I still see a facebook process running. Technically i guess this should be gone i guess and hence any idea how to clean these which i guess can improve battery life.
Update: If I have notifications turned on in facebook then yes it can still run some process even after I close it in Apps Tab but I see the same with Samsung Music Player i.e after I close it I still see a thread in "Running" Apps.
vravik said:
Please tell me a solution if any one knows:
I open facebook and after some time i close this application by click on list tasks soft key and close it. Immediately when I go into setting > application manager > running apps I still see a facebook process running. Technically i guess this should be gone i guess and hence any idea how to clean these which i guess can improve battery life.
Update: If I have notifications turned on in facebook then yes it can still run some process even after I close it in Apps Tab but I see the same with Samsung Music Player i.e after I close it I still see a thread in "Running" Apps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
These kind of apps do tend to run a background process to check for updates. Closing the app doesn't necessarily mean that the processes will close. And I'm not even sure even if you turn off all the notification services of an app, all the related processes will close for sure, it depends. Also, if you are using apps like facebook etc, do not worry much about the battery life if you have turned off the background data usage and notification services. It will have very minimal impact, almost negligible!
on Tmobile version, Its not possible to disable Tmobile apps or smasung's own bloat. What a sigh!
taranfx said:
on Tmobile version, Its not possible to disable Tmobile apps or smasung's own bloat. What a sigh!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Package disabler pro app disables everything you want!
No root needed
Dvanzutphenkann said:
Package disabler pro app disables everything you want!
No root needed
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes it does. Came across this thread http://forum.xda-developers.com/note5/general/guide-bloating-touchwizzing-note-5-t3184563 does a good job on mine so far. It disabled around 30 app and i feel it did make a difference. I use the default XML attached
ShyamSasi said:
Yes it does. Came across this thread http://forum.xda-developers.com/note5/general/guide-bloating-touchwizzing-note-5-t3184563 does a good job on mine so far. It disabled around 30 app and i feel it did make a difference. I use the default XML attached
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Out of all those 30 apps you disabled did you lose any functionality?
Personally i have never really felt the need to get rid of the facebook app despite the bad criticism it gets online! Recently however i decided to disable it and use an alternative app (swipe pro) Its not quiet as good as the proper facebook app but its not bad! If it was gonna help with battery life then i was happy to stick with it but iam not so sure it has! Battery life ever since has been equal at best , possibly even a little worse off then i was when i had the facebook app so iam wondering whats the actual difference between the two? Is the facebook app after improving or are alternative apps such as swipe pro simply not as good as they should be? Iam talking strictly in terms of saving battery life here!
Thoughts?
I tried out Swipe for Facebook, but it wasn't as fluent as Metal for Facebook.
All these apps are wrappers for the web version of FB.
I'd always use FB on browser, but it's annoying to view messages (request desktop site and then it doesn't fit to screen. Still though, Metal surely has the fastest loading time for me.
The regular Facebook app (and Messenger) are complete battery hogs. They eat up more resources than they should and have a lot of unneeded permissions. I could deal with that if they didn't force Messenger on it.
Anyways, any third party Facebook app is just a wrapper to the mobile web version. They will always require less permissions and resources.
Ariac Konrel said:
I tried out Swipe for Facebook, but it wasn't as fluent as Metal for Facebook.
All these apps are wrappers for the web version of FB.
I'd always use FB on browser, but it's annoying to view messages (request desktop site and then it doesn't fit to screen. Still though, Metal surely has the fastest loading time for me.
The regular Facebook app (and Messenger) are complete battery hogs. They eat up more resources than they should and have a lot of unneeded permissions. I could deal with that if they didn't force Messenger on it.
Anyways, any third party Facebook app is just a wrapper to the mobile web version. They will always require less permissions and resources.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Any reasoning why i havent seen any improvement in battery life? It actually seems to be a tad worse! I should add that i have not been experiencing poor battery life, Iam content with it but i just wanted to rid myself of facebook and try an alternative in the hope i could improve battery life a little further but in my own personal experience, disabling facebook and using swipe pro instead has made no difference!!
Blaalad12 said:
Personally i have never really felt the need to get rid of the facebook app despite the bad criticism it gets online! Recently however i decided to disable it and use an alternative app (swipe pro) Its not quiet as good as the proper facebook app but its not bad! If it was gonna help with battery life then i was happy to stick with it but iam not so sure it has! Battery life ever since has been equal at best , possibly even a little worse off then i was when i had the facebook app so iam wondering whats the actual difference between the two? Is the facebook app after improving or are alternative apps such as swipe pro simply not as good as they should be? Iam talking strictly in terms of saving battery life here!
Thoughts?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can try "Friendly for Facebook" (https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=io.friendly), it's super smooth and well done. I was using it on iPhone, now it is available for Android too.
Blaalad12 said:
Any reasoning why i havent seen any improvement in battery life? It actually seems to be a tad worse! I should add that i have not been experiencing poor battery life, Iam content with it but i just wanted to rid myself of facebook and try an alternative in the hope i could improve battery life a little further but in my own personal experience, disabling facebook and using swipe pro instead has made no difference!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Placebo?
Have you actually used a proper app to track the app's usage? Wakelocks? Drain? Etc. I'm sure Swipe has less usage.
You're never gonna have a DRASTIC change in overall battery, though.
If you want to improve battery life, look up Greenify.
Even non-root mode is useful.
-------
@benzo
I just downloaded that app and holy crap it's so smooth, I know it wasn't directed to me but thank you. ?
Ariac Konrel said:
Placebo?
Have you actually used a proper app to track the app's usage? Wakelocks? Drain? Etc. I'm sure Swipe has less usage.
You're never gonna have a DRASTIC change in overall battery, though.
If you want to improve battery life, look up Greenify.
Even non-root mode is useful.
-------
@benzo
I just downloaded that app and holy crap it's so smooth, I know it wasn't directed to me but thank you.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Is greenify worth it? Seems to be conflicting info on it. Some say its great, others say its not necessary and others say it actually runs in the background and thus they found the battery life to be equally as bad if not worse when using greenify!!
Blaalad12 said:
Is greenify worth it? Seems to be conflicting info on it. Some say its great, others say its not necessary and others say it actually runs in the background and thus they found the battery life to be equally as bad if not worse when using greenify!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Greenify drains almost no battery, it's very lightweight and designed to work well.
It's best use would be to shut down apps that run in the background to get less drain. I do it when I am at work and whatnot, it saves a lot of battery for me in the end.
It also does aggresive doze (optional) to further save some juice.
There's no way Greenify can make your battery worse, I've never heard of that.
The only thing that can is like 85% of those battery saver apps on the Play Store. I'm sure some are good, but most suck.
I switched from FB to Swipe Pro a few month ago. According to GSam battery monitor, FB was always the top drainer, Swipe is much more easy on the battery.
Ariac Konrel said:
I just downloaded that app and holy crap it's so smooth, I know it wasn't directed to me but thank you.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Glad to hear that
Does anyone here know what the best set up for swipe pro is? After using it the past 24 hours i quiet like it and battery life does seem to have been improved a little but i have two issues! Iam not seeing/receiving any notifications unless i go in to the app? I have 'enable notifications' ticked and whilst they are present within the app, iam not seeing them until i use the app which sucks a little!! Ironically i have 'vibrate' off and when i go into the app and the notification shows itself it vibrates ha Any ideas?
Also, the settings in general are a bit confusing in my opinion. For example , should i toggled 'enable messages' to on or leave off if i still use messenger? and with notification frequency sync . I had it set to manual on the original app but on this thats not an option?? Is there a difference in how both work? And what is foreground syncing?
Thanks
Oh and on a side note. Whilst i know the difference between amoled and lcd panels and understand that each pixel is being used with lcd regardless of wether the wallpaper is black or not! Is there any power savings to be had at all by using black wallpapers/themes on the htc 10??
bump
Below is a screenshot of the recent apps button on my OP3. I'd like to know what the difference between the two button options circled in red numbered 1 and 2 are.
Thank you
shobuddy said:
Below is a screenshot of the recent apps button on my OP3. I'd like to know what the difference between the two button options circled in red numbered 1 and 2 are.
Thank you
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
One option will just clear the application tray, and other option will clear it from the memory.
raj.parekh07 said:
One option will just clear the application tray, and other option will clear it from the memory.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Is there a way to put a shortcut on my homescreen to the clear from memory option
shobuddy said:
Is there a way to put a shortcut on my homescreen to the clear from memory option
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Why would you even want to do that? You have 6GB of RAM to use!
Sent from my OnePlus 3 using Tapatalk
Explorer23 said:
Why would you even want to do that? You have 6GB of RAM to use!
Sent from my OnePlus 3 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
also, constantly clearing RAM wastes MORE battery since services will be restarted every time
2x4 said:
also, constantly clearing RAM wastes MORE battery since services will be restarted every time
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yup, more power consumption plus the fact that loading apps fresh each time provides worse user experience (slower operation).
There is absolutely no reason to clear RAM on powerful modern devices. Even I - the person that always kept clearing recents and even using memory cleaners on older devices - got used to keeping everything in RAM. And I'm happier than ever
Sent from my OnePlus 3 using Tapatalk
Explorer23 said:
Yup, more power consumption plus the fact that loading apps fresh each time provides worse user experience (slower operation).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, but it depends on how frequently you are opening and closing apps. If you don't use an app all that often, there is no harm in clearing it.
2x4 said:
also, constantly clearing RAM wastes MORE battery since services will be restarted every time
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't intend to do it constantly but want to have it available when I DO want to do it. For example, If I use Facebook once a day, I would rather not have it constantly running in the background.
Explorer23 said:
Why would you even want to do that? You have 6GB of RAM to use!
Sent from my OnePlus 3 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It seems the "clear ram" feature actually hibernates apps. i.e it does a "Force Stop" in the Android app settings. This is behavior I want to preserve battery, particularly for apps I don't use all that often.
shobuddy said:
Yes, but it depends on how frequently you are opening and closing apps. If you don't use an app all that often, there is no harm in clearing it.
I don't intend to do it constantly but want to have it available when I DO want to do it. For example, If I use Facebook once a day, I would rather not have it constantly running in the background.
It seems the "clear ram" feature actually hibernates apps. i.e it does a "Force Stop" in the Android app settings. This is behavior I want to preserve battery, particularly for apps I don't use all that often.
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FB and similar apps are a perfect example of why it's a terrible idea to clear RAM - ever try force closing it? It always re launches itself without fail, even with root and apps like Greenify
Well, if you don't want to to kill apps often, you don't need a shortcut. It's just 2 taps away anyways (recents > kill).
Natively you can't get a shortcut. Maybe could be done with Tasker or something similar, but I'm not sure.
After all apps in RAM don't really consume power so you won't see any benefits if you do force stop stuff that you don't use often. The difference is negligible, there are a lot more factors that make much bigger difference.
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Is #2 in the screenshot the same thing as doze?
shobuddy said:
Is #2 in the screenshot the same thing as doze?
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no