Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Originally Posted by
NothingIsTrue I don't think closing apps in mutlitasking pane works the same way as task killers do.
Am I wrong?
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Right, that's more akin to closing a window than to force stopping a process.
XT1060. Through spacetime.
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
I will say this again. "Unused RAM is wasted RAM." used ram will never degrade performance or use battery.
In-fact it improves performance and save battery a bit.
- - - Updated - - -
Originally Posted by
PcNy I don't think closing apps in mutlitasking pane works the same way as task killers do.
Am I wrong?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eI4ZEhlsX-Y
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Originally Posted by
still1 I will say this again. "Unused RAM is wasted RAM." used ram will never degrade performance or use battery.
In-fact it improves performance and save battery a bit.
- - - Updated - - - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eI4ZEhlsX-Y So I should not swipe close apps in recent apps tab ?
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Originally Posted by
PcNy So I should not swipe close apps in recent apps tab ?
its up to you. don't close regularly used app.
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Originally Posted by
PcNy So I should not swipe close apps in recent apps tab ?
The recent apps menu is just temporary shortcuts created for quickly toggling between apps. Swiping them out does not upload them from memory.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 4
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Originally Posted by
fernandezhjr The recent apps menu is just temporary shortcuts created for quickly toggling between apps. Swiping them out does not upload them from memory.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 4
but in video, it does?
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Originally Posted by
fernandezhjr The recent apps menu is just temporary shortcuts created for quickly toggling between apps. Swiping them out does not upload them from memory.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 4
you are wrong.. check the video i posted
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Originally Posted by
still1 you are wrong.. check the video i posted
I can swipe away an app from the recent menus and then go check in my Watchdog app and memory is still allocated to the app I swiped away. I have to forcefully stop it.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 4
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Originally Posted by
fernandezhjr I can swipe away an app from the recent menus and then go check in my Watchdog app and memory is still allocated to the app I swiped away. I have to forcefully stop it.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 4
seriously i wouldn't use task manager. that's the worst you can install on a Nexus with lot of negative side effects.
if you are rooted use Greenify. best app ever..
back to your point. like mentioned in the video some app clear it from the memory after closing from recent list
but some app(service apps) will have some footprint even after closing apps (Task killer will have a big negative effects on these kind of apps.)
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Ok, this article makes sense. I have noticed different behavior with different apps. Notably, some apps do close out, while others remain in the background and some switch to services.
http://www.howtogeek.com/169549/what...ent-apps-list/
The video appears to explain it the same. Not all apps are completely closed. And he mentions the switching to services. I notice some apps just stay in the background. Also, at the end of the video he states swiping them "pretty much" frees all memory. From what I see, it is less than what he implies, but I'm sure this would be dependent on what type of apps one typically runs.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 4
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
Originally Posted by
still1 seriously i wouldn't use task manager. that's the worst you can install on a Nexus with lot of negative side effects.
if you are rooted use Greenify. best app ever..
back to your point. like mentioned in the video some app clear it from the memory after closing from recent list
but some app(service apps) will have some footprint even after closing apps (Task killer will have a big negative effects on these kind of apps.)
Watchdog is not a typical task manager. It monitors for misbehaving apps and alerts me when one is misbehaving so I can forcefully close it. It rarely happens, but it does happen.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 4
Re: Nexus 4 - Ram question
I notice battery improvement when I swipe away recently used apps. Not using N4, but with my two other phones right now. I've been doing that for a month or so and it does seem to help.
Sent from my C5170 via Tapatalk 2