benhmadison
Well-known member
- Mar 30, 2011
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Perform a factory reset. It's always advised to do so after taking an ota.
Sent from my Nexus 5 using AC Forums mobile app
Sent from my Nexus 5 using AC Forums mobile app
This matches my experience. Just kind of random lag, but doesn't last long and no real Patten. Stock was a bit more responsive.
YouTube seems ok for me. maybe a bit slow to start and load videos but playback in a window and full screen seems fine. But I'm on Clean Rom and Elemental kernel.(default settings on the kernel. That might matter.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using AC Forums mobile app
My brand new Nexus 7 with almost no apps (Skype, SkyDrive, infinite Flight, OneNote, RD, Netflix, Chase/BoA Banking Apps, and maybe one or two more)... These apps were even running in the background. I was trying to browse the play store and it was so sluggish and lagging with every attempted input. I don't have mail or an other services set up yet. I thought it was maybe my screen protector, but I had no issues before kitkat.
I wish I would have not let it install KitKat as I did not have any issue before hand. It is my fault... I should have read up on the update and waited. I had no expectations for it, other than I would be fine. I see many people were waiting on it... I guess I will just factory reset my device. I have nothing to lose at this point as nothing is set up... It just bugs me that it would have these issues. I could see if I had hacked it or had many apps and services modified. Shoot, it is almost stock...
I know in time it will be good, but man I want to go back to jellybean...
One of my android buddies told me that Android just needs the OS restored every so often for best performance. That is no good... It is like the old windows days...
Just an update.. The performance really does stink on my Nexus 7. I almost want to return it. This KitKat update has something to do with it. I am really not happy with it now. It isn't even fun to use as I have to power it off just to get stable performance...
Since I have used an android device in a while, What is the best way to factory reset it and restore it to a state where I am? On my surface/windows phone it will download all of the apps that I had installed... I am not looking for the data as it may or may not restore, but at least putting all of the apps back will be nice. I will try a restart before I flash it back to 4.3. This reminds me of taking my mac from 10.6 to 7... Oh did I hate lion... I hated it so much I stopped using it... Then I sold it... I don't want to get rid of my Nexus, but honestly I has not met my expectations and I still use my surface for fun. Is it just the play store that is super sluggish after the KitKat update? No novice here guys, I am more than a tech Junkie professionally and personally.
One of my android buddies told me that Android just needs the OS restored every so often for best performance. That is no good... It is like the old windows days... Seriously. Android is going through all of the pain Windows did a decade ago.
That is pure nonsense and he doesn't know what he's talking about. I've used a Droid 2 for two years, a Galaxy S3 for the past 17 months, and the wife has used an Atrix for two years and now a Note II for a year and we've never needed to reload the OS for any sort of performance issues. Matter of fact I only flashed my OS once on my Droid 2 and that was only because of Motorola's awful color scheme change when they went to Gingerbread I believe it was. I flashed back to Froyo and used the device until the physical keyboard started failing hence the upgrade at the end of my contract. Upgrades often cause problems and it's always best to wait and read all the feedback for weeks afterwards before you make the jump. This isn't limited to Android, Windows is well renowned for update problems, both in small updates and major OS revisions. Apple's system OS's also have similar growth pains. I work in IT for a living and numerous times their OS updates have broken remote access to our firm. Even iOS 7 came with numerous complaints and I can tell you firsthand it's very sluggish on older devices like the iPhone 4.
But saying Android needs an occasional wipe and reinstall to keep running smooth is pure hogwash.
Rev.
Citizen Coyote, the apps are not the problem. I just finished doing an automatic update on my Nexus 7 Second Gen to Kit Kat. The UI definitely has a significant and most notable lack of responsiveness to it. It is no longer snappy like it was before. I first noticed it on the wife's Nexus 7 First Gen. I thought maybe it was due to the slower CPU; however, that's not the case. Just going into settings and making a selection often results in multiple attempts to select the function you want. The sluggishness is clearly an issue with Kit Kat. It's ironic since the Kit Kat update was suppose to speed up the touchscreen so that it responds faster and more accurately than ever before.Under Settings, go to Backup & reset, make sure the backup options are checked, then perform the factory reset. After the tablet finishes up, it should automatically download any app you had installed before. The data backup is problematic; in my experience some apps restore fine, others start out stock. If an app has a separate backup option, I would turn that on.
Once upon a time some Android devices may have required a factory reset to clean out all the cruft, but that was in the past and impacted by manufacturer skins. I have never done a reset on my year old Nexus 4, and it works flawlessly. Current Android devices are no more in need of resets than any other device out there, but if you're having issues it's one way to try and solve them. If this fails to fix your lag, you can also try manually reflashing the factory image.
For all of you who are having issues with the KitKat update, how many of you have tried a cache partition wipe? This tends to help smooth things out after a system update.
http://forums.androidcentral.com/go...e-nexus-7-2012-2013-cache-partition-wipe.html
I am in the IT industry and so is he (Programmer/System Administration; He is a systems administrator) . In my experience it is not farfetched
We also experienced things like this with other OSes and Mobile OSes.
Citizen Coyote, the apps are not the problem. I just finished doing an automatic update on my Nexus 7 Second Gen to Kit Kat. The UI definitely has a significant and most notable lack of responsiveness to it. It is no longer snappy like it was before. I first noticed it on the wife's Nexus 7 First Gen. I thought maybe it was due to the slower CPU; however, that's not the case. Just going into settings and making a selection often results in multiple attempts to select the function you want. The sluggishness is clearly an issue with Kit Kat. It's ironic since the Kit Kat update was suppose to speed up the touchscreen so that it responds faster and more accurately than ever before.
Once the download is pushed onto other Nexus devices and eventually to other non Nexus devices, more people will be coming forward. Only then, we will likely expect a fix to the problem. For right now, we will just have to live with the update.
Well part of the point I was making and neglected to include is how one's use of the operating system is typically responsible for the vast majority of issues with OS performance. My point was that running a nice clean OS that is handled responsibly will not require a wipe and rebuild every "now and then" to keep it running fine. Unless there is some improper coding (bugs) or inherent file system flaw the OS shouldn't magically on it's own slowly get worse and worse. Sometimes this *appears* to happen and people blame it on the OS when it's in fact the hard drive getting old and losing performance for example. If people load up 6 different launchers to try in Android, 5 different file managers, 5 different 3rd party keyboards, 35 games, 4 different music players, have tons of Widgets running, etc then yes they are probably more prone to experience some performance issues eventually. Similar to how in Windows installing, uninstalling later, etc would cause fragmentation so the drive head needed to jump around more. If an OS/machine is kept nicely maintained and not abused it shouldn't just start slowing down with over time unless the components themselves are aging or coming close to end of life cycle.
Rev.
Lets just relax and end this branch on this thread.. It has now digressed and offers no real contribution to the thread. Thanks for your help and we will see each other around the forum for more enlightening conversation.![]()
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Is there such a thing as an OS today that doesn't benefit from an occasional reset? If so, I'm unaware of it.
I've been running Ubuntu Linux for about 5 years now, the same revision, with zero issues in performance since the day I installed it and it's my general "use for everything outside of music writing/recording" machine. For my music creation machine, being I'm also a musician that writes and records, I use a separate Windows 7/Windows XP dual boot Core I7 based machine for around 4 years as well with no issues. But that machine I don't even keep actively connected to the Internet, I keep the NIC turned off in the bios. It's dual boot due to the change in my music software and old projects still done in the old software under Windows XP. Either way, no issues whatsoever.
Rev.