Has anyone else noticed that the XDA App for this forum uses CPU even after you exit the app? I installed OS Monitor and it shows XDA App periodically using 10 to 15 percent even though I had selected the EXIT option from the XDA App menu.
After I killed the XDA App with task killer, I was fine. I know task killers are a controversial subject, but this is why I use a task killer.
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Exiting an app and closing it are two different things.
So how do you properly close the App?
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Menu>settings>applications>manage applications>running tab>app you want to close>force close.
Ditch the task killer. It is probably hogging more battery than the apps you are worried about closing.
Android OS has a built in task killer. It will open and close apps when needed. Task killer apps are overrated and cause other issues.
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Been using advanced task killer and love it. I have been using the auto killer but it kills data and voice.
Does anyone know which apps or processes to add to the exception list to prevent that?
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Make sure in settings > security level that it's set to high...
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I don't see anything in settings and security for security level.
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In the app...open the app, push menu, go to settings them at the bottom it should be there
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Protip: Task-killers are absolutely worthless on Android. If you want to manage running apps, get something like Autostarts that changes PERMISSIONS.
TheBiles said:
Protip: Task-killers are absolutely worthless on Android. If you want to manage running apps, get something like Autostarts that changes PERMISSIONS.
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That is really true, I had always heard that but until I actually used Autostarts did I realize how it handles the system and running apps, all basically on it's own.
I use advance task kill and it seems .like whenever I open it it says I have apps running that I didn't open. Why is this, and how do I stop that?
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skaroger867 said:
I use advance task kill and it seems .like whenever I open it it says I have apps running that I didn't open. Why is this, and how do I stop that?
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With Android, you don't need to kill tasks. If it's not using CPU, then its not using battery. Task killer apps do more harm than good.
Read up more about this here: http://lifehacker.com/#!5650894/and...ed-what-they-do-and-why-you-shouldnt-use-them
You can't stop these apps from opening. The OS does this when it feels like it. The best to do is buy system panel, enable monitoring, and prove to yourself that those apps are using zero CPU by checking the CPU list.
I was wondering if I use advanced task killer our any apps that kills back ground apps would it make my phone slower our faster cause I factory reset this phone and its snappy and I didn't use advanced task killer our anything and it was getting slow and not as fast in 1 week what should I do use the advanced task killer our any apparently you think best for it please respond back. If you know a answer ...
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I don't believe to two are very relevant.
Well task killers are ok but i would go with something like fast reboot. Its acts like a task killer but instead of killing the app it signals it to restart or reboot so this way it stops correctly and frees up memory
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I use no task killer app on my phone and it runs awesomely smooth at 600 mhz thanks to supercharger. What's more I only have 128 mb of ram.
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Advanced Task Killer is bad because it is too aggressive and kills important background apps like the alarm service, etc. If you want a task manager download the new Astro file manager (it has a task killer built in) or ES Task Manager.
There is a very good tutorial on xda I don't have the thread handy but it explains why task killers are bad
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I have advance task killer and I close apps frequently through out the day. For some strange reason there are 30+ apps running when I'm only using 10 of at the most or a little more. How can I keep them from opening after they have been terminated???
My S3 is starting to move slow and I don't like it One bit!!!
One of the cardinal rules of Android is to never use a task killer......
As you have found out, the apps just open again anyway & all that open/closing will absolutely kill your battery life.
jmorton10 said:
One of the cardinal rules of Android is to never use a task killer......
As you have found out, the apps just open again anyway & all that open/closing will absolutely kill your battery life.
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SoO.......Do you have a solution?
Ummm close them or reboot
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xWiZxKiDx said:
SoO.......Do you have a solution?
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Don't use a task killer
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xWiZxKiDx said:
SoO.......Do you have a solution?
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Don't use a task killer, especially on Froyo and above.
Task killers are totally counter-productive in Android.
Android does a great job of memory management all by itself, just let it do its thing & don't worry about it.
Never use ATK. Wastes more battery then the apps themselves.
As everyone else has said, using a task killer makes things worse, not better.
What everyone has said about not using task killer plus, exit apps using the back button and not home if you want to close them. That way they will exit rather than stay in memory. Also, if you really want to dump everything out of memory then hold in home>task manager>end all.
And it's moving slowly since the task killer kills the app so the app relanches itself. Killed, relaunch, killed relaunch, killed relanch. Now multiply that by 10 or 20 or 30 apps and it's a wonder your CPUand RAM haven't melted yet.
There's a stock option in 'settings-developer settings' to limit background processes. Also to kill any app you leave right away.
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I have an app called Eva which is a voice assistant. I believe ics is sometimes closing the app when its in the background, because the widget for the app is not responsive and has no text sometimes and works fine other times. I don't know of anyway in ics to set an exception in the task management to never close this app or its background process. Any way to get around this without a 3rd party task killer? Or is there any way to see a log of what ics is killing in the background to confirm my suspicion?
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It's probably the apps problem I'd contact their user support.
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I've heard using task killers is bad. Is long-pressing the back key to kill an app just as bad? Its really useful when I want to stop it completely or not have to go back several menus.
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jryan388 said:
I've heard using task killers is bad. Is long-pressing the back key to kill an app just as bad? Its really useful when I want to stop it completely or not have to go back several menus.
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With ICS you don't need a task killer,it's inbuilt. But on gingerbread, a task killer is a very wellcome app, and i think long-pressing back to kill doesnt do harm,offcourse that may sometimes depend on wich app it is, but should be harmless.
jryan388 said:
I've heard using task killers is bad. Is long-pressing the back key to kill an app just as bad? Its really useful when I want to stop it completely or not have to go back several menus.
Sent from my LG-P999 using xda app-developers app
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IMHO as an Android developer killing an app manually isn't bad. It's usually not necessary unless the app is doing something really stupid -- making a lot of network requests or refusing to turn off the GPS are two examples -- but it should be fine. Apps shouldn't get messed up when you force-close them unless they're designed poorly.
Tasks killers, on the other hand, are a Bad Thing because Android does a good job of managing memory on its own. Task killers try to do the same thing but they do it worse, with unpredictable results.
If you want to increase your battery life, check the statistics on your battery monitor app every once in awhile, most phones have one. Just uninstall any apps that seem to be eating up an inappropriate amount of battery.