I have uninstall boost+, and no optimize the apps in the battery setting. But U11+ keeps kill background apps such as parallel multi space and games.
When I use S6 edge+, there was no such problem. Is it possible to make U11+ stop killing background apps?
tuxintosh said:
I have uninstall boost+, and no optimize the apps in the battery setting. But U11+ keeps kill background apps such as parallel multi space and games.
When I use S6 edge+, there was no such problem. Is it possible to make U11+ stop killing background apps?
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Click to collapse
It's not the HTC software that is killing proccess. With the release of Android 26 "Oreo" Google limited the frame for apps to be idle and the os is killing off none foreground apps more aggressively. It's up to the developers to implement and adapt to the new guidelines.
Sent from my HTC U11 plus using Tapatalk
Then it will take long time for the developer because I reported the issue to parallel multi space but they did not realize this.
Related
it's a big problem with the high ram used i think,
so anyone have the idea to kill the ram occupied.
please help me,tell me how
I, for one, am a fond advocate of the blunderbuss.
Sent from my GT-I9000 using XDA App
qinfeng0007 said:
it's a big problem with the high ram used i think,
so anyone have the idea to kill the ram occupied.
please help me,tell me how
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Click to collapse
Try this http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1111145
Use the Program Monitor widget, if using an alternative launcher try this https://market.android.com/details?id=com.elnware.ActiveAppsWidget
I use Advanced Task Killer (avaible in the market).
It comes with a one touch widget which allows you to kill all inactive/unwanted processes with one click and shows you the amount of free RAM. You can also schedule automatic task killing in the background.
Uninstall it. Android does the killing when needed. Thos taskkillers just drain battery and run on background.
And how is this accesories related?
galaxysdev said:
Uninstall it. Android does the killing when needed. Thos taskkillers just drain battery and run on background.
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May be true, but I always experience a noticeable speedgain after killing unneeded applications running in the background. And my battery consumption of advanced task killer is below 1% (when monitored).
icon changes after update
hi,
i have some games in a home screen folder.
when that game updates, then the icon in the folder looks the default android icon and not the original game/app icon, as before the update.
to get the game icon back, i have to delete that icon and then make another shortcut for that game and put it into the folder.
any other war to do this ?
will having less services running, extend the battery life ?
google maps always seems to be on as a service, though i havent used it in a long time. if i stop the service, it starts again.
which android services can be safely stopped ?
HTC Desire S, Sense UI 2.1, Android 2.3.3
thanks
Anyone has the same experience ?
+ 1 mate
my solution is just move .apk to internal mem
after that is ok
I rebooted and it fixed the icons issue.
Yes, fewer active services will improve battery.
Google maps is used for location services like weather, world clock etc. other apps that use location services.... So it comes back on no matter how many times you kill it, unless you totally turn off all network connections, which is no fun.
Sent from my HTC Desire S using XDA Premium App
& also running less services does not improve your battery life as when a program is on RAM it doesn't use power
but if you kill services with task managers then they will start again which causes battery drain
I let the phone to update automatically, i dont move the apks myself.
geek_seeds said:
+ 1 mate
my solution is just move .apk to internal mem
after that is ok
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Click to collapse
For me, reboot does not refresh the icons, they still remain as the default android icon.
i can delete them and then make the app shortcut again, and then add to the folder, then the appropriate game icon is shown.
mikeyd85 said:
I rebooted and it fixed the icons issue.
Yes, fewer active services will improve battery.
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hmm, so cant stop it then.
i will have to check which services can be stopped safely.
MasterDL said:
Google maps is used for location services like weather, world clock etc. other apps that use location services.... So it comes back on no matter how many times you kill it, unless you totally turn off all network connections, which is no fun.
Sent from my HTC Desire S using XDA Premium App
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Click to collapse
i do not kill processes myself. earlier i was using ATK, but then i removed it.
i just monitor the processes and services running in the background.
what u r saying about program being on RAM consuming no battery, is true. but what i was wondering was about services - which i believe dont just stay and idle in the RAM, but i think must be consuming some resources.
So i would like to know which android services can be safely shut down.
kartkk said:
& also running less services does not improve your battery life as when a program is on RAM it doesn't use power
but if you kill services with task managers then they will start again which causes battery drain
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Yes or no?? Ive had my tab for almost two weeks now and when i have a couple apps open it gets bogged down and reboots. Im pretty sure its because its run out of memory. Thoughts??
Sent from my Galaxy Tab 7+
I do not think that your problem is the system running out of memory. Android will automatically kill unused apps and free up memory when needed. I use the memory widget of GoLauncher EX and notice that as soon as the available ram goes below 100 mb or so, if I open a new app, the widget will actually show an increased memory.
I believe the problem is in the apps themselves, rather than in their memory request.
P_
Definitely a big help. I keep a one click widget on my home screen and tap it whenever I'm near it. has quite the visible effect when homescreen scrolling goes from somewhat laggy to perfectly smooth by hitting the button
Never use an automatic task killer on newer versions of Android.
There is no reason to use a task killer for memory management at this point, the only reasons to use it:
1) Killing apps that are using lots of background CPU (not memory) - this is rare
2) Killing apps that are holding long wakelocks - common with badly written apps. Ideally you avoid these, but some (like Facebook) are ones you just have to deal with sometimes.
3) Killing apps that use too much background data, which can also negatively affect battery life (Skype...)
Entropy512 said:
Never use an automatic task killer on newer versions of Android.
There is no reason to use a task killer for memory management at this point, the only reasons to use it:
1) Killing apps that are using lots of background CPU (not memory) - this is rare
2) Killing apps that are holding long wakelocks - common with badly written apps. Ideally you avoid these, but some (like Facebook) are ones you just have to deal with sometimes.
3) Killing apps that use too much background data, which can also negatively affect battery life (Skype...)
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Thats what i was looking for! Thanks!!
Sent from my Galaxy Tab 7+
I agree with entropy, and if you do end up using one, don't be obsessive about killing apps constantly. Killing apps you frequently use can negatively effect your battery life.
Sent from my GT-P6210 using Tapatalk
There is a task manager in your mini app tray.
Hi
Coming from an iPhone I am wondering: are apps allowed to run freely in the background?
I noticed this when waking up and noticing the Bloomberg app was up to date.
Wondering if this might drain my battery...
Thanks
benyben123 said:
Hi
Coming from an iPhone I am wondering: are apps allowed to run freely in the background?
I noticed this when waking up and noticing the Bloomberg app was up to date.
Wondering if this might drain my battery...
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, apps do run in the background. If you prefer them not to (which does not make a significant difference), you can use the Greenify app to kill the running app. Apps run in the background on iOS as well; it just doesn't show it. :good:
Did not know this. I thought iOS does not allow background activity. Thank you
Hello,
is it possible to autokill background apps (selectable) after some time (10,30,xx minutes?)? Working on ways to optimize my battery life.
sebflex said:
Hello,
is it possible to autokill background apps (selectable) after some time (10,30,xx minutes?)? Working on ways to optimize my battery life.
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Click to collapse
Apps like Tasker can do that
Apps killer kills your battery
You have to prevent autostart of applications not needed every day.
Use SD Maid to switch off autostart possibility and maybe freeze not needed permanent.
I Think there is a funktion in the developermenue to quit apps after close them.