[App Tool] Speed Booster & Memory Cleaner ( Optimizer pro ) - The Best Apps You've Never Heard of

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Speed Booster, most easy to use Android phone booster for you to clean junk files, reclaim storage, boost memory, and save battery
Google Play Link: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.speedbooster.lifestyle
Features about Speed Booster
Junk files clean:
Removes system cache, apps cache files and temporary files just by one click!
Phone speed up:
Delete background&startup apps to speed up your Android phone.
Pre-installed apps remove :
Remove useless pre-installed apps, free up memory for your Android phone to boost your phone
Backup Your Apps
Google Play Link : https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.speedbooster.lifestyle
Dircect Apk Download : http://forum.xda-developers.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=3663325&stc=1&d=1456665977
1. Optimize your Android device and boost its speed with 1 tap Boost Cleaner.
2. Storage cleaner - Clear app cache, clean junk files, and remove unused APKs .
3. Speed booster - close running apps, improve battery, data, and RAM speed .
4. Apps Backup features .
5. App History - see how each app consumes battery, data, RAM, storage.
6. Force close apps that continually run in the background .
7. Apps Manager .
8. See app data usage to avoid going your over mobile data limits .
9. Extend your phone's battery life .
any feedback is welcome

Are we not done with the "Optimize/Clean/Speed up your android" thing yet?

Bewinxed said:
Are we not done with the "Optimize/Clean/Speed up your android" thing yet?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi Bewinxed ;
actually Speed Booster app does clean junk file and boost memory :
it's a One-tap optimize. Also clear your cache, APKs and unwanted files.
5 star reviews are greatly appreciated and encourages us to continue improving Speed Booster for you.

But there's no point freeing up RAM... Android already does that for you when it needs it. Free RAM is wasted RAM.

MrAxlee said:
But there's no point freeing up RAM... Android already does that for you when it needs it. Free RAM is wasted RAM.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes MrAxlee thats true , but unused ram is a part of system performance ; you want to have some memory free. Your devices will not have enough memory to preload EVERY application, so it has to guess based on your actions. It needs to have enough memory available to quickly load an app that you may want.
Let's say that you want to load an application that requires 256MB of RAM, but you only have 128MB available. This means that the OS is going to try to clear 128MB of RAM to accomodate your app, and as your app loads, will try to clear another 128MB to return to its previous state. This clear/load/clear causes a longer load time and more slowdown than just loading an app not already in memory.
I dont recommend using task killers every then and now, but i do recommend cache cleaner and boost apps because in my experience, even on a high end phone, clearing the app cache does work when scrolling gets choppy or the keyboard gets laggy. Thats probably down to bad apps . :good:
Our Speed Booster & cache cleaner Tool have many option to choose from : one Tap Boost , cache clean or apps backup ...etc
you will find that it actually 'cure' the lag , and enhance phone speed
That of course doesn't mean that Android's Memory management sucks , but what do you think happens when you install 20+ random apps from the market? Yeah, you need a task manager.

On windows, you do want to free up RAM, for the reasons you specified. But on Android, it's completely different. In short, android likes running with a pretty full up RAM, around 80/85%. If you remove them all, after a couple of minutes it'll just launch them again and use even more resources in doing so (it uses more resources to launch than it does to run). Your phone learns how you use your phone the more you use it, it knows what you use most andleast and loads those apps into your RAM accordingly. Using up all your RAM to load the apps it knows you'll be opening and using to speed up those ones.
Also, your phone uses flash memory rather than (what most people are using) disk memory. Flash memory is plenty fast enough to launch your applications, and also constantly reading and writing off your flash memory will just degrade it.
but what do you think happens when you install 20+ random apps from the market? Yeah, you need a task manager.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'd filled my entire 32GB of storage on my new S7 Edge within an hour of owning, solely with apps. I haven't experienced any more lag than I did when it was on stock. This is a common theme across every phone I've owned.
What you're experiencing is a placebo effect.
If you want to optimise performance, something like how Greenify works would be best. Apps closed by greenify don't automatically reopen.
In regards to your app though, the other features I like very much.

MrAxlee, Free RAM = free CPU.
You will see it on stupid cheap devices.
So, calm down and keep using S7 or another expensive smartphone. And stop writing this **** like "Android automatically clean RAM ".

egigoka said:
MrAxlee, Free RAM = free CPU.
You will see it on stupid cheap devices.
So, calm down and keep using S7 or another expensive smartphone. And stop writing this **** like "Android automatically clean RAM ".
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
slamandar said:
Yes MrAxlee thats true , but unused ram is a part of system performance ; you want to have some memory free. Your devices will not have enough memory to preload EVERY application, so it has to guess based on your actions. It needs to have enough memory available to quickly load an app that you may want.
Let's say that you want to load an application that requires 256MB of RAM, but you only have 128MB available. This means that the OS is going to try to clear 128MB of RAM to accomodate your app, and as your app loads, will try to clear another 128MB to return to its previous state. This clear/load/clear causes a longer load time and more slowdown than just loading an app not already in memory.
I dont recommend using task killers every then and now, but i do recommend cache cleaner and boost apps because in my experience, even on a high end phone, clearing the app cache does work when scrolling gets choppy or the keyboard gets laggy. Thats probably down to bad apps . :good:
Our Speed Booster & cache cleaner Tool have many option to choose from : one Tap Boost , cache clean or apps backup ...etc
you will find that it actually 'cure' the lag , and enhance phone speed
That of course doesn't mean that Android's Memory management sucks , but what do you think happens when you install 20+ random apps from the market? Yeah, you need a task manager.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Go and get greenify and then concentrate on other pressing matters in life than freeing up ram that will eventually be full again in minutes....

Bewinxed said:
Are we not done with the "Optimize/Clean/Speed up your android" thing yet?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Of course we are. Those kinds of apps should be illegal.
The developer of this app made this thread, so he will try to convince us to use his creation.

I installed the aicp_hlte_mm-11.0-UNOFFICIAL-20160112 on my galaxy note 3 and I couldn't be happier. It does, however make my phone lag a tad bit sometimes unlike what the original 5.0 samsung rom did. I wouldn't go back anytime soon anyway.
MM does RAM resource management pretty good right? So I don't need apps like this one?

thanks bro

thanks
thanks bro i really need this

Related

[How to] --->You Want Better Battery Life:::Read This

Battery Life on a SmartPhone - The Riddle, The Enigma​
Attaining 20+ hours of battery life is not only possible it is totally attainable with most phone configurations. The secret to making this happen is, understanding what are the contributing factors are and knowing what to do first.
This guide will help. After reading this guide, you will be able to understand how to end power eating culprits and answer those same questions we see over and over in the threads...... that is .... solving the passive battery drain and get the 20 hours of battery life we all want and desire.
I have tried to get almost everything I can think of and put it in one place. We have all seen the threads that say, “Please help with my battery issue”, “Does undervolting save you battery life” or “Getting horrible battery life” (and yes I did use the…SEARCH Button…and these are titles directly from the Q & A section).
Post 1: Tips and Tricks
Post 2: Roms/Kernels, OverClocking/Undervolting and Memory Management
Post 3: Apps (for your download pleasure)
I will be using satirical stories and anecdotes to get my point across below. Not meant to offend or point fingers at anyone. I am just using real life references to get to the point. Also I am not much for fancy colors. I tried it at the top here but not so much further down. If there is something specific I want to call attention too, I will BOLD it and maybe RED it too.
This is not a GUIDE to get better battery life but rather a GUIDEline to get it. What is the difference, you say? A Guide is a step by step process that you must/should follow to get the outcome that the person who created it wanted you to get [A+B+C+D should = E]. A Guideline is more of a recommendation that allows some choice or flexibility in the understanding, execution or use [A +B-(C+D) can = E].
As we all know, all Vibrants are not created equal and so if something works for one person and not the other, then is it a software, hardware or human error. Chances are it is a combination of all three. Hopefully this can slim those down a bit and answer some questions that you might have or have seen.
**Special thanks to NOOB_IN_N33D for his help in gathering info, especially the MIUI/CM7 parts below. Do yourself a favor and hit up his Guide- Easily Flash MIUI for Vibrant. It has themes, modems, kernels,… and he really put a lot of time and effort into it. It is stickied in the QA section so it shouldn’t be too hard to find. Hit his thanks button please.**
TopShelf10 has this to say about getting the most out of your battery life
the problem is, people want to believe that they can save battery without changing their usage habits. this simply is not possible. no rom or kernel will realistically do this for you. if you remove 1 brick from a bag full of 15 bricks, the bag will be lighter, but still very heavy. you need to download "spare parts" or "process monitor" from the market and start analyzing the way your apps are acting. also look into data syncs that are happening in the background. apps that stay open behind your back/what they are doing 9an app called "autostarts" can prevent apps from self-running under certain scenarios). animation speed. polling for notifications. gps. wifi scans. overclocking. cpu/ram usage. proper sleep. widgets. brightness. 2g/3g. data usage. call time. text volume. - THESE are the things that really affect your battery life.
bottom line is, if you truly want to save battery you are going to have to get your hands dirty...there simply isnt a one-click (or one-flash) solution.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Below is a list of fundamental things that can be done without rooting or custom ROM/Kernels. (Standard disclaimer applies: You use it, you set it and you are responsible)
1. Be Realistic -
Do you really think that you can get two whole days out of your battery? If you do, then you must have a very important pile of papers it is sitting on to not even pick up your phone for that long. These are phones. These are mini-computers. These are arcade games. And they want, dare I say, need to be played with, talked on or downloaded to. USE YOUR PHONE.
2. Syncing –
I know you are very important and you need to know what LeBron is doing right now, just in case you get a cup for a coffee and he might be in Starbucks at the same time and you get your picture taken with him and upload it to Facebook, Twitter or Google+. That is fine and I applaud you for it and will probably download the picture and Photoshop myself in your place. This is not the problem. Syncing your accounts is. That is what is causing battery drain. Do you really need to have your FB widget (see widgets section) streaming all day long? Does Kim K.’s endorsement of a potato chip really affect your everyday life? I doubt it. Kill them (not LeBron or Kim K. but rather the auto-syncing). Every time you “friend” someone their numbers, contact info gets sync’d to your phone. Also, there are settings in Facebook, Twitter and Google+ that you can upload pictures instantly. Don’t do that. Once you do, it is out in the Ether-World and just swallowed a bunch of battery doing it too.
Settings>Accounts and Sync>Auto-sync>uncheck it
3. Widgets –
They look cool. But widgets are nothing more than RAM and battery hungry monsters that you purposely put in your home screen. Think about it. What does a widget really do? All it really does is monitor an app that you have running. So not only is it running and taking up battery and RAM but the app that it is linked to is running in the background al’ a Facebook, Twitter, Google+, CNBC, MSNBC, BBC,… the list goes on and on because they want us to put THEM on our home page. What a great marketing campaign the widget is. “Hey look at me new home screen” “Cool. Hey what widget is that?” “Oh, it is X” “Nice, I’ll have to download that tonight when I get home” and then and there they have you and your battery.
4. Apps –
You have to pay attention to your apps. I repeat. You have to pay attention to your apps. Especially if they run in the background. This can be anything from a harmless .99c game to a monster like Live Wallpaper. The battery drain threat is twofold here because the app is running in the background but it could also be using its anonymous data collection abilities and sending that back to the Mothership. Ever wonder why you have a H with up and down arrows in your status bar when your phone is just sitting there? This is because some app is transmitting data, whether you are using it or not. There are apps in the market that monitor these situations like Watchdog or kill the data link when the lock screen is enabled like Juice Defender (see Apps below) or you can adjust app permissions like LBE Privacy Guard. Data transfer is #2 on the What Kills My Battery list.
5. Display/ Wifi/ Airplane Mode/ Animations –
Display:
#1 when it comes to what is eating your battery. Always has been and always will be. Accept it and try to do something about it. This part is easy. Just lower the brightness. You can use Auto or set it as a brightness that is low but you are still able to see well enough to function. Live Wallpapers fall into this category. They are cool to look at but static ones take up less RAM and also less display because they are not running all the time in the background. These screens are bright at 100%, so tone it down. (see Apps below).
WIFI:
Another helpful tip is setting your WIFI sleep policy to Never. This can be done by going here Setting>Wireless>WIFI> Menu key>Advanced>WIFI Sleep Policy and set it to Never.
Airplane Mode Toggle:
NOOB_IN_N33D found this helpful trick too. Phazeman...
"Toggle the airplane mode on/off 3 times in a row, that will reduce your Cell Standby battery usage.
It should only be necessary to do it once after flashing but if you think Cell Standby uses too much power at some stage you could toggle again the airplane mode"…Phazeman
Animations: Set Settings > Display > Animations to "Off or Med. animations.
These are 5 fundamental things that you can do to help reduce battery drain and get some more life out of your phone. Anyone can do these. All you have to do is watch your phone and use some common sense. “Why does my battery drain after only 6 hours? All I was doing was checking Facebook.” Do you really need to be on Facebook for that long of a time? I doubt it. How many services do you have running? How many tasks do you have running? (Android does a good job of shutting down tasks on its own, but if you are using a task killer, it takes more juice to start up an app than to turn it back on, so to say.) Think of it like an airplane. Takes more fuel to get up in the clouds, but once you are up there, it is pretty much coasting along with way less burn.
Special thanks to Oka1, NOOB_IN N33D and chamonix
**************************************************​**THE PETITION ** We need your support!!!​
Click the above link to find out more​
Hit the thanks button
ROMs/Kernels, Overclocking/Undervolting and Memory Management
ROMs are key things to think about when it comes to battery life. They can be fully established and working fine, can be RCs and still in development or they can be Alpha/Betas and completely experimental or just beginning. Choosing the best ROM or Kernel is going to depend on what YOU want out of your phone. Do you want a stable 2.2 ROM that has great battery life but not the customizability as MIUI or CM7? Do you want a Gingerbread AOSP ROM that has memory leak issues? There is the rub because CM7 and MIUI have fantastic customization possibilities Gingerbread is well Gingerbread but it has its own issues, and 2.2’s are about as basic as they come. However 2.2’s, because they are so old and overworked, have been Optimized to their fullest and some outstanding tweaks have really brought them to the forefront in daily drivers. Again, the choice is up to you.
Kernels go hand-in-hand with your ROM. Does the kernel support Overclocking or Undervolting. How much RAM and what tweaks are included in the kernel? Does THIS kernel work with THAT ROM? These are all spelled out for you in the OP of each kernel (and ROM) for you to find out. Read them because if you don’t, you’ll bork your phone and then your next post will be, “Help. I Bricked my phone”.
Froyo Kernels (see here) and read their OPs. Many can be Overclocked and some can be Undervolted
Battery Friendly Kernels for MIUI/CM7:
Glitch and Bali-CM (there are others but NOOB_IN_N33D gave me these to put in here). Read their OPs to find out more of what they do.
Overclocking/Undervolting –
If you don’t already know what Overclocking is, well it is pretty much self-explanatory. You can Overclock your CPU above the clock-speed that Samsung, T-Mobile governed it at. This can be done with apps like Tegrak’s Overclock (for stock kernels), SetCPU (here and here), CPUtuner,…Generally have to be ROOTed to do these but if you are flashing ROMs and Kernels then you probably already are. UnderVolting is basically what it sounds like too. You are Undervolting your CPU to conserve battery.
This can be one of the best ways for a more advanced user to save battery. Overclocking is great to see those really cool Quadrant scores. Wow!!! But it also ramps up the battery drain, as well as temperature which can shorten your battery’s TOTAL life. If you want to Overclock to 1.2-1.7 just to see what you score on Quadrant or SmartBench, then do it for that time. Most ROMs/Kernels run stable and smooth at or about 1.0-1.2 with minimal effects on battery (as long as you do tweaks in above post). If you decide to Undervolt you can use Pimp My CPU or Voltage Control to do this but take care to step it down slowly until you find the right settings for you or you will see random reboots or phone freezes and those suck trying to diagnose.
***Please note that whether you Overclock or Undervolt, do NOT “Set on Boot” until you know that they are going to work. Otherwise if it doesn’t work and your phone randomly reboots, you will get into a boot cycle (not a bootloop) because you put them in “Set on Boot”. You must test before you should do this.***
Glitch (Kernel for MIUI/CM7) –very brief overview-See its OP for more
- Up to 1.7GHz CPU OC with added bus/GPU OC (Thanks to morfic for the great base of work)
- Undervolting using Pimp my CPU or Voltage Control
Bali_CM (Kernel for MIUI/CM7) –very brief overview-See its OP for more
- OC/UV up to 1.4GHz (Safe boot to 1GHz) [require SetCPU from market]
- Multiple CPU governor, smartass included (default: ondemand)
- Multiple IO scheduler (default: BFQ)
- CIFS support
- Support SetCPU screen off 100/400 profile
NOOB_IN_N33D is running MIUI and is having great battery life for a 2.3.x ROM. He has given me his settings for Overclocking and Undervolting to put in this guide.
**Please note that these are HIS settings for HIS set-up. They may not work for you but it is a good idea to see what I am talking about when it comes to OC/UV**
N00B_IN_N33D's OC/UV
N00B_IN_N33D said:
These are my SetCPU settings for my phone running MIUI + Glitch (High Leakage)...
Main:
Max: 1000 Max: 1200
Min: 100 OR Min: 100
Scaling: smartassV2 or conservative Scaling: smartassV2 or conservative
Profiles:
Screen Off Max: 400 Charging Max: 800
Min: 100 Min: 100
Scaling: lazy Scaling: Conservative
Voltage:
1500 MHz -25 mV
1440 MHz -75 mV
1400 MHz - 75 mV
1200 MHz - 75 mV
1000 MHz - 125 mV
800 MHz - 150 mV
400 MHz - 175 mV
200 MHz - 225 mV
100 MHz - 250 mV
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
KaintFM's OC/UV
KaintFM said:
Rom MIUI-NB
Kernel Glitch v12 ML
Modem KB5
Main:
Max: 1400
Min: 100
Scaling: Performance
Profiles:
Screen Off Max: 200
Min: 100
Scaling: On-Demand
Voltage:
1400mhz - 75uv
1300mhz - 75uv
1200mhz - 75uv
1000mhz - 100uv
800mhz - 125uv
400mhz - 150uv
200mhz - 250uv
100mhz - 475uv (can't believe it's stable, but it is-his words, not mine)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Memory Management
Did you know that you can also free up some internal memory space by just basic maintenance? You can install a Cache Cleaner from the market. I use Cache Cleaner NG (root) and CacheMate (root) which will clear your cache for you, Cache Cleaner NG will even clear your cache on your SDcard. Open Root Explorer and if you see a bunch of free floating cache files, those need to go. Wasted space. Small in the scheme of your SDcard, but still wasted.
So here we go (best part is at the bottom though):
Ok so you go into XDA on your phone, go to the themes page and look at what and how people are theming their phones or see some pix of someone's SetCPU profiles. All those develop a cache that takes up space on your phone. Now lets say that you go to the market and look through some apps or update your apps (more on this later). This also generates cache, usually up to 2-4mb. Ever try to download something from the market and it says something like "not enough space". This not needed cache may be some of the reason.
Here are some tricks and apps that some of you may know and also some tricks that I have found that I am sure most don't know about.
SOME GOOD LOW MEMORY APPS:
Cache Cleaner NG and Cache Mate (both root and free-Cache Mate has a paid but the free one works just fine.)
Diskusage (free) ~ This one will show you a graphical version of your /data/apps and also you SD card to show you exactly what is taking up so much space. You can click on that item and hit "Show" and it will take you to the app's page in Manager Applications. It also has a root function too that will allow you to see what is in /system, /cache, /data,…
Some sort of file manager to get to some things I'll mention below. (I use Root Explorer)
SOME MEMORY CLEARING TIPS AND TRICKS:
Home Launcher ~ If you have a 3rd party home launcher, see if it has the ability to long-press an icon to take you to its screen in the Manage Apps section. I use ADWex and if you long-press on say Market, it takes me to the same place as is I were to go to Settings->Applications->Manage Apps->Market. Instead of all that, just long-press on the icon and BAM! it takes you there. Here you can clear out your cache for the market or delete the data (if you need to do that). Or clear the cache of the XDA app b/c you looked at too many pix.
Browsers ~ These develop cache that takes up memory and space, especially the stock browser. If you use a 3rd party, you can get the settings to clear cache, cookies, passwords,…on exit. I use Dolphin, but I am pretty sure that most have something like this on them. (side note: most 3rd party browsers once exited will not run in the background unlike the stock one)
Media ~ So you download a bunch of mp3's from the net or click on some pix and save it to your SD card. Or maybe you just felt like wiping your card and having a fresh start. Every time you reboot, you phone will scan media. No big deal, but the more you criss-cross things from PC to phone and back again, it can create a bunch of double files in your media cache on the phone. With the proper placement of .nomedia files (this prevents your media scanner from doing just that, scanning media- i.e. pix, jpegs,…Don’t place a .nomedia in your music, album art or DCIM files**bad).
Every once in a while, I'll hit the Diskusage or go to Manage apps and clear the media cache. Then I got to my file manager and the DCIM->Thumbs and delete the .Thumbnails files (should be 2). Unmount the SD card and remount to start the media scan, pull up the Gallery and wait for the thumbs to come back (depending on how many you have, this could take awhile). By doing this you can get almost 5 mb back if you have a bunch of double scans in your media folder.
AND NOW FOR SOME TIPS THAT MOST COULD NOT KNOW:
LOSTDIR - Lets say that you have your phone plugged into your PC and for some reason you, in a fit of rage, jerk the plug out without unmounting it first. This creates a file that is put into your LOST DIR folder on your SD card. Anytime you don't safely unmount the SD card, it will create a file in that folder. In the scheme of the SD card, it isn't too much, but I don't like having useless items free floating about.
TOMBSTONES - So you are downloading an update from the market and for some reason your phone freezes and the Force Close-Retry-Wait doesn't work out for you. You have to do a battery pull. Frustrating I know and the memory takes a hit too. Every time you have to do a battery pull because of a freeze up or something of the like, it creates a TOMBSTONE file in /data. These are useless and can be deleted. If you are flashing ROMs and are constantly having to do battery pulls b/c market crashes or an app freezes, then you are creating a Tombstone file.
**Here is where your file manager (with root) will help. Go into /data and scroll all the way to the bottom and open /tombstone. There should be some files in there and depending on how many there are, I could be a nice chunk of wasted memory. Just select all and delete. They are not needed. Your internal memory should go up by doing this.
LOST & FOUND - Same scenario, but now go into /data/ cache or /cache and you'll see Dalvik-Cache (don’t mess with this), Lost & Found and Recovery. If you tried to download an app and it got frozen for some reason and had to do a battery pull, the apk will be free floating in there, uninstalled (free floating radical). You can delete this. While it isn't in the Dalvik-Cache folder, it is taking up space. Once you are able to download something completely and correctly from the market, it will populate into Dalvik-Cache correctly and won't be a free radical, as I like to say.
Change Log:
1/23/12 - Added more MIUI OC/UV settings; memory management tips, tricks, apps.
Hit this thanks button too
Useful Apps to prolong battery life
These are some apps that will help you get the most of your battery life. I will put a brief descpition of them and you can also click on their names to take you directly to their market link. Note that some of these are ROOT apps and almost all of them also have PAID versions that greatly expand their functionality. Use the free ones and see how you like them and then kick in for the PAID ones if you want. The only one that I really suggest paying for right out of the gate to get the most out of your battery is Juice Defender Plus.
Batstat Widget –
I know, I know. Above I said that widgets were nothing more that monitoring apps on your home page, but this one works great, has low memory and is very, very simple. It shows Charge in %, Volts to know when you are FULLY charged and Temperature F/C to tell you that your phone is getting hot and exactly how hot it is.
BetterBatteryStats –
This app will show you what exactly is eating at your battery. Processes, Running Services, Wakelocks, Partial Wakelocks. It is a PAID app but for XDA users it is free. See here for more extensive details, instructions, screenies, change-logs,... and credits go to Chamonix and his development team for this app.
Batter Calibrator –
When you flash a new ROM, it is always best to wipe the old battery stats associated with that ROM, so you can start fresh as a daisy. How this works is you plug you phone in and charge to 100%, do not mess with it or surf the net (I do this overnight). While still plugged in, hit the apps, grant SU permission and hit the Calibrate Battery button. Grant SU permission again and once done, unplug your phone. Your Batterystats.bin has been deleted. You running your phone down by just using it normally. Most say to run it until it shuts off, but I have had bad experiences doing this, so I let it get to 10-15% and plug it in then. Charge fully up to 100% (again no surfing or games) and you will notice a dramatic increase in battery life.
**Note that this can be done two other ways. You can boot into CWR or Custom Recovery and go to Advanced Settings and there will be the Wipe Batterystats.bin option. Or you can do it manually by going into /data/system/ and deleting the batterystats.bin in there. Any of the three methods work to get the entirely same result in the end. I just like using the app or manually myself. **
Why battery calibration is important and what it is doing.
The app and what it does is more for when you are flashing a ROM and have around 60% and then once booted up fully, you charge it up to 100%. Decided you don't like your ROM and go back to your original ROM via backup, it will show 60% instead of the 100 or 90% you had before you went back to back up b/c you backed up the batstat bin when you nandroided your original ROM.
How about this for an example:
ROM: Deranged9 70% (and you made a backup) Then went to Zendroid, charged and hit calibrate battery at 100%. Used Zendroid for a few hours and decided it wasn't your bag. Your battery is at 50%. You flash back to your Deranged ROM and you know for a fact you had 50% before you flashed back, but now once totally booted, you are showing 70%. This is why you use the battery calibrator after you flash a ROM. Gotta create a new batstat bin for you "fresh" ROM (even though it is a backup).
Recently there has been information debunking this process. I will post it below, however I know what it says, but I also know what I've seen/experienced too. Here is the post by Dianne Hackborn, a Google Dev on her G+ account.
Dianne Hackborn - Jan 12, 2012 - Public
Today's myth debunking:
"The battery indicator in the status/notification bar is a reflection of the batterystats.bin file in the data/system/ directory."
No, it does not.
This file is used to maintain, across reboots, low-level data about the kinds of operations the device and your apps are doing between battery changes. That is, it is solely used to compute the blame for battery usage shown in the "Battery Use" UI in settings.
That is, it has deeply significant things like "app X held a wake lock for 2 minutes" and "the screen was on at 60% brightness for 10 minutes."
It has no impact on the current battery level shown to you.
It has no impact on your battery life.
Deleting it is not going to do anything to make your more device more fantastic and wonderful... well, unless you have some deep hatred for seeing anything shown in the battery usage UI. And anyway, it is reset every time you unplug from power with a relatively full charge (thus why the battery usage UI data resets at that point), so this would be a much easier way to make it go away.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
JuiceDefender (Plus) [Since I use JD+, that is what I am going to refer too.]
This app’s ability to kill Radio/Data has NO EFFECT on phone calls or messaging. You will still get that call in the middle of the night you were expecting.
If you set it to custom, the go into the settings tab on the right and then all the way at the bottom, there is two buttons to push, The first in Interactive which will pull up Juice Defender for up for any app that isn't already configured and the other is Configure Apps. This is the one that you can customize on an app-to-app basis where if you are no using an app and the screen is locked, it kills the radio/data traffic for that app.
Say you are listening to IHeartRadio, this you would want either Enable or Enable/off (which means the screen will be locked but the radio/data will be working). Now take the browser. If you are not using the browser, then you don't need it transmitting data right? So you would set that one to Enable (which means that it will only enable data traffic when that app is being used).
Juice Defender only works when the screen is locked (WidgetLocker lock screens interfere with JuiceDefender), don't forget and all widgets are battery drains b/c all they really are is a monitoring app and if it is tied to something like Facebook or Google+, then that data will be running constantly.
Settings:
Enable = Radio/data on when app is in use (front)
Enable/off = Radio/data on for background apps (when screen is locked)
Disable = Disables radio/data traffic completely when that app is running
Do Nothing = What is says
Examples:
Angry Birds = Disable (Here is a little known trick that I use for this and any game with Ads. With this and something like Adfree, no more ads in Angry Birds even though the ads are embedded in the .apk)
Pandora/Jango/ Tune-in = Enable/Off (this will keep your battery temp down when streaming)
Browser/ Market = Enable (not enable/off b/c then it will keep your radio/data open)
Beautiful Widgets = Enable/off
mClock/Clockr = Enable/off
SMS/MMS = Enable or Do Nothing (why would you push disable)
I have been using JD+ for over a year on 3 different phones and multiple ROMs and have noticed a considerable difference in battery life. Just takes some time to figure out YOUR settings and what YOU like. I have also used it on Stock kernel and had no problems either.
LBE Privacy Guard
This will go good with JuiceDefender, as they both prevent unwanted data transfer. Protect your privacy by controlling the permission of each application to access your sensitive data. Block malicious operation from Mal-wares and Trojans. Block unwanted network traffic if you don’t have a unlimited data plan. Find out which application is trying to steal your privacy by checking the security log.
RAM Munchers eat battery too. These will fix that for you.
Autostarts (paid-CAUTION this is for advanced users)
Keep control over your phone: See what applications do behind your back.
Shows you what apps run on phone startup, and what other events trigger in the background. Root users can disable unwanted autostarts and speed up their phone boot.
Watchdog
See what is eating your RAM. Hint: if it is using RAM,then probably it is also using battery too.
Spare Parts
Spare Parts allows you to enable some settings
that are not found in the default setting menu
Process Monitor
List the running process on your Android device.
Long click item to kill application or open application.
Fastboot –
This is a handy little app that kills all your services at once and lets them restart back up. I use this right before I hit the lock screen, so that if any app-services are running that I don’t have configured in Juice Defender Plus they will be killed, frees up about 50-70mb of memory, and then I lock the screen and JD takes over. This one is optional if you want it or not. I like it just fine and it works for me.
Matte Screen Filter –
Puts a sort of Dim setting on your screen. Almost like a display overlay, ok? And I did mean to rhyme those. I don’t use it because I have my display set how I want it but you can.
And might as well hit this thanks button too for the Hat Trick
Change Log:
12/22/11 - Per chamonix (BetterBatteryStats dev) took out apk and input his thread to get most updated version, stats, change log [still free for XDA users though]
1/9/12 - Took out actual APKs and put in market links. Click on the name and it will direct you to the market link for the free version that app.
1/23/12 - Added more battery apps and some RAM monitoring/killing apps.
Very helpful post, Thanks.
I was one of the people asking about this and I just wanted to thank you a ton im gonna try some stuff you suggested, mainly my widgets I have about 3 pages haha. Anyways thanks for the guide
Sent from my SGH-T959 using XDA Premium App
Also just wanted to ask a question but first thanks to your no widgets getting I get 20% more life . But to my question, does having alot of apps on a home screen eg.more pages,more apps,etc. Use more battery just like the widgets?
Sent from my SGH-T959 using XDA Premium App
sneakysnake16 said:
Also just wanted to ask a question but first thanks to your no widgets getting I get 20% more life . But to my question, does having alot of apps on a home screen eg.more pages,more apps,etc. Use more battery just like the widgets?
Sent from my SGH-T959 using XDA Premium App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't think having more apps on your home screen uses more battery, but having more page does use more RAM. I use only 3 pages but I have 4 or 5 folders set up too. Games for instance has 12 games in it. Social has 3 (you know what they are).
Glad to see it is working for you. Use the apps too and if you decide to get JD+ let me know and I will help you set it up correctly.
Guide looks awesome bro!
Update: Also, thanks for including a link to my guide! Really appreciate that!
Sent from my SGH-T959 (Samsung Vibrant)
I think im gonna get it cause so far about 7 hours so so far its a 1 hour increase in life. And ok good to know as of now i only have 1 page but normally i have 3.
Sent from my SGH-T959 using XDA Premium App
Bigger Battery:
For anyone interested here's a thread on buying a larger 1800mAh battery (400mAh more then the stock batteries) that are cheap and fit nicely. Check out this thread here.
Can you imagine... The extended juice of an Epic 4G battery + Woodrube's epic guideline!? ...That would be two epic's combined to =
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I got juice defender ultimate would that help? And how do i use it if you wouldnt mind telling me. I have it set to basic
Sent from my SGH-T959 using XDA Premium App
Ill type you up something and PM you tonight or tomorrow. If you could PM me a general list of your apps, that would help.
I'm like a crack dealer. First answer is free, the second one costs you (a thanks).
Did you know that you can also hit the THANKS button from your XDA Premium app? Just tap the post.
Ok ill do that and i didnt know that ill be sure to thank you you helped me alot so far thanks for the tip
Sent from my SGH-T959 using XDA Premium App
Updated some links and a few things in post #2
Awesome, your guide is from now on "stickied"!
N00B_IN_N33D said:
Awesome, your guide is from now on "stickied"!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i think you need to tell me your secret haxor ways to get it stickied too.
Lol, there's no "haxor" skills needed to get a guide stickied.
Sent from my SGH-T959 (Samsung Vibrant)
I am going to be updating this sometime this weekend, so if anyone has any suggestions, let me know and I'll take a look at them. I also have found another miui kernel OC/UV set up too that I'll put in there as well.
Woodrube said:
I also have found another miui kernel OC/UV set up too that I'll put in there as well.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
For which kernel?
Sent from my SGH-T959 (Samsung Vibrant)
It is Glitch also but the OC isn't as high as yours but the UC is fairly different especially in the lower frequencies. I think that I might put in something about memory management too but still undecided about that yet. Are you working on the new BIBLE? Talk about a monster task. Let me know it you need help and want to colabo on it. PM me your thoughts. Always here to help bro.
ps: Digging your new graphics too. You've come quite a long way.

AutoKiller Memory Optimizer

I've been suggested to use AutoKiller Memory Optimizer so I installed it, but don't know the best settings for Galaxy Ace,
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Also should I enable Chuck Norris option?
Conclusion said:
I've been suggested to use AutoKiller Memory Optimizer
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Who has? I suggest you don't use it. I also suggest that you don't listen to anyone who tells you to use that crap. Because that person must be an idiot, since he/she doesn't know anything about android.
pähkinä said:
Who has? I suggest you don't use it. I also suggest that you don't listen to anyone who tells you to use that crap. Because that person must be an idiot, since he/she doesn't know anything about android.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@an0nym0us_ suggested me to use AutoKiller Memory Optimizer
Conclusion said:
@an0nym0us_ suggested me to use AutoKiller Memory Optimizer
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
pähkinä said:
Who has? I suggest you don't use it. I also suggest that you don't listen to anyone who tells you to use that crap. Because that person must be an idiot, since he/she doesn't know anything about android.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well that's an awkward one isn't it!
Sent from my Nexus S using xda premium
scoffyburito said:
Well that's an awkward one isn't it!
Sent from my Nexus S using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So I'm confused, whether to use it or not?
pähkinä said:
Who has? I suggest you don't use it. I also suggest that you don't listen to anyone who tells you to use that crap. Because that person must be an idiot, since he/she doesn't know anything about android.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yeah right mr. know-it-all. i may be not a dev but atleast i know what i'm talking about.
btw op, that app is really straightforward, only to adjust android native autokiller value. theres already preset value to choose from.
read this to understand what those value means
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=622666
an0nym0us_ said:
yeah right mr. know-it-all. i may be not a dev but atleast i know what i'm talking about.
btw op, that app is really straightforward, only to adjust android native autokiller value. theres already preset value to choose from.
read this to understand what those value means
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=622666
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So do I need to change my values or leave it as it is?
I charged my phone to 100% (Full Charged) and now it's 50%, is AutoKiller Memory Optimizer running in the background using more battery?
I'm using JuiceDefender Ultimate with Extreme profile
the default value is the one that andoid use by default, set in the kernel.
if u adjust it, it can bring effects of more ram and maybe less multitask as android will contantly killing background app/process. its a trade off between more free ram and multitask.
worth thing to note, u shouldn't treat android as windows. not all app/process running in background can drain battery/resource. android works way different than windows. closed app wont be killed instantly, it'll be stored in ram so when u reopen it again it would be faster to launch. the value as showed in the app is what android use to determine which app/process to kills and what process/apps to leave.
if u feels the app drains your battery then dont use it, let android do its own process killing its own way.
an0nym0us_ said:
the default value is the one that andoid use by default, set in the kernel.
if u adjust it, it can bring effects of more ram and maybe less multitask as android will contantly killing background app/process. its a trade off between more free ram and multitask.
worth thing to note, u shouldn't treat android as windows. not all app/process running in background can drain battery/resource. android works way different than windows. closed app wont be killed instantly, it'll be stored in ram so when u reopen it again it would be faster to launch. the value as showed in the app is what android use to determine which app/process to kills and what process/apps to leave.
if u feels the app drains your battery then dont use it, let android do its own process killing its own way.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So the values shown in AutoKiller Memory Optimizer is the same as Android values, if I leave them as default I should rather let Android do them itself?
P.S - Sometimes I check how much RAM I have left and it says 50MB, so some apps are running in the background using battery?
Conclusion said:
So the values shown in AutoKiller Memory Optimizer is the same as Android values, if I leave them as default I should rather let Android do them itself?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
exactly.
Hah! I thought it was just another task killer, my bad, sorry. Though i still think that you shouldn't use it, if you don't know what you're doing... I really can't see how it would make anything better, in hands of a person who doesn't understand it.
But as i understand it, the app shouldn't be running on the background. So you've just inputted some wrong values, which make the battery drain faster.
Edit: And juicedefender also might have an affect, as there's also some kind of memory tweaks? So at least delete one of the apps.
Conclusion said:
P.S - Sometimes I check how much RAM I have left and it says 50MB, so some apps are running in the background using battery?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Even if they're on the background, it doesn't mean that they would use any battery. It's the cpu usage that matters in android, not ram.
When I look at the processes that is running, Facebook, Google Play Store and PowerAMP is always running using RAM, so it will drain battery as well?
P.S - When does Android automatically closes apps?
Conclusion said:
When I look at the processes that is running, Facebook, Google Play Store and PowerAMP is always running using RAM, so it will drain battery as well?
P.S - When does Android automatically closes apps?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If those apps are using cpu, then they will drain battery. If they are NOT using CPU, then they are NOT draining battery.
Android closes apps automatically, when more ram is needed, simple as that.
pähkinä said:
If those apps are using cpu, then they will drain battery. If they are NOT using CPU, then they are NOT draining battery.
Android closes apps automatically, when more ram is needed, simple as that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OFF
If I'm right it's a hungarian app. I'm very proud of it.
ON
Tapatalk 2 @Samsung Galaxy Ace
Things about ram:
When android needs to free up RAM to launch a process it will use CPU, which will use battery. So if most RAM is already occupied, and you launch a heavy app (like a 3d game) it will take longer to launch and at first it will be laggy while the system frees up the necessary RAM. This will also use more battery than having already free RAM.
Autokiller:
Its great. It tweaks the default values of android's native task killer. Depending on which apps you use the most, you can change how much free RAM you want to have. This is useful cuz even apps you use once a month will remain in RAM as long as there is RAM available, so by raising the free RAM values you can make sure only apps you use the most stay in RAM.
Tradeoff:
If the free RAM value is too high, you won't be able to multitask well, and also the system will be constantly freeing up RAM which uses more battery. If it is too low, almost all apps will remain in memory, meaning the system will work extra when launching new apps, which will use more battery.
Autokiller allows you to personalize the system's native task killer, there isn't a thing like best values. It depends on your use. If anything, leave the default values and nothing will change. Be sure to read the documentation on how it works, there is plenty.

RAM Usage (CM9)

Hello, I have CM9.1 stable installed on my Galaxy Note. I've noticed that almost every time I open chrome it has to reload all my tabs because it's been seemingly cleared from RAM.
In the apps settings when I go to running my phone is using 500MB RAM just sitting idle. Why?
When I add up the 7 things in the list it only adds up to 138MB. Is the Android OS really using 362MB RAM doing nothing? This is also not considering the 305MB RAM lost to whatever such as the GPU (shows 719MB RAM in About Phone screen).
Why do I have so little free to keep the states of apps without having to reload them all the time?
Two words
Background applications....
The OS is running and hosting many files not visible ..
And I agree with you that for whatever reason ...CM 9 is a ram hog.
My stock GB rom fully loaded only uses 280....and my current UCLF6 is only 234...
Try out "system monitor " app from the play store , and see if you can track down the culprit..
My guess is Google services framework ....g
You guys realize android doesn't handle ram like Windows right?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I717 using xda app-developers app
Eric-1987 said:
You guys realize android doesn't handle ram like Windows right?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I717 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Maybe, maybe not, but that didn't answer his question either way.
Eric-1987 said:
You guys realize android doesn't handle ram like Windows right?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I717 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, it keeps things cached. You can see this in the running tab in the apps setting menu. Those are the cached apps. The RUNNING apps are actually running and are the last to be killed. So when I go back to the home screen from chrome, it is moved to the cached processes. I only have 200MB free there, so when I launch one or two other programs chrome gets dumped and has to be reloaded. I just want to know why my RAM is 500MB used doing nothing.
gregsarg said:
Two words
Background applications....
The OS is running and hosting many files not visible ..
And I agree with you that for whatever reason ...CM 9 is a ram hog.
My stock GB rom fully loaded only uses 280....and my current UCLF6 is only 234...
Try out "system monitor " app from the play store , and see if you can track down the culprit..
My guess is Google services framework ....g
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In "System Tuner" app I see that Android System uses 85MB, System UI uses 52MB, Phone uses 27MB, User Dictionary uses 45MB, Google Bookmarks Sync takes 13MB. Just so much crap.
Why is user dictionary wasting 45MB of my RAM? I'm just really annoyed. My Note has on average 100MB more RAM used and it has 100MB less RAM available then my Galaxy S2. That's 200MB less usable RAM meaning my apps get killed all the time.
petard said:
Yeah, it keeps things cached. You can see this in the running tab in the apps setting menu. Those are the cached apps. The RUNNING apps are actually running and are the last to be killed. So when I go back to the home screen from chrome, it is moved to the cached processes. I only have 200MB free there, so when I launch one or two other programs chrome gets dumped and has to be reloaded. I just want to know why my RAM is 500MB used doing nothing.
In "System Tuner" app I see that Android System uses 85MB, System UI uses 52MB, Phone uses 27MB, User Dictionary uses 45MB, Google Bookmarks Sync takes 13MB. Just so much crap.
Why is user dictionary wasting 45MB of my RAM? I'm just really annoyed. My Note has on average 100MB more RAM used and it has 100MB less RAM available then my Galaxy S2. That's 200MB less usable RAM meaning my apps get killed all the time.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That dictionary app is really high...mine shows 10-12 MB...
Google bookmark sync can be killed if your are staying on this build for a while, but if your flashing nightlies, then yeh...you'll want that...
android system is actually pretty good, as the CM build is so small...
and system UI is okay as well...
Overall I'd say you have maybe one high user, but beyond that...pretty normal....g
---------- Post added at 08:46 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:44 AM ----------
how many downloaded apps are you running ?
And do they include facebook, twitter, google plus ??
---------- Post added at 08:47 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:46 AM ----------
Eric-1987 said:
You guys realize android doesn't handle ram like Windows right?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I717 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank God !!...I was getting worried there for a second.....
i am on cm9.1 and with nothing running i am only using 270mb. you may want to try and reodex your rom. i noticed a drop in ram usage after odexing and runs much smoother. you can get a flashable zip from here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1264611 use odex-lib2sys-ICS-cwm.zip. even if doesnt help with your ram issue it has other benefits.
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s89281b said:
i am on cm9.1 and with nothing running i am only using 270mb. you may want to try and reodex your rom. i noticed a drop in ram usage after odexing and runs much smoother. you can get a flashable zip from here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1264611 use odex-lib2sys-ICS-cwm.zip. even if doesnt help with your ram issue it has other benefits.
View attachment 1304663
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wow this decreased the RAM usage by about 100MB! Thanks!
How the heck is yours at 250 though? Mine's still at 400MB. Looks like you have no launcher running. I have Play store, Media, and Maps all using about 12MB so that puts me at 364MB without them. Still 100MB higher.
if you are using system tuner use task manager to kill all apps and see what you have then. mine drops to around 250 then goes back up to 270 or 280 after normal system apps come back up but stays in that range until start opening more. then open and close apps one at a time to see whats using up your ram. i also remove anything i dont need from system/app. i dont know how much that helps with ram since it is the first thing i do before checking anything but it does cut down on system file size a good bit. just be careful what you delete. if i get some time i can make a list of what is safe to remove.

[GUIDE] How To Make Your X10 Mini and Pro Faster | Last Update March 30, 2013

Hi everyone!
I am going to give you some tips for making your X10 Mini and Pro fast as possible, without breaking your hardware.
I am running JellyBean, and the guide is optimized for JellyBean, but you can surely apply in other versions as well.
1. Do Not Overclock- With overclocking, it makes your CPU work harder than what it can handle. It may result in damages of your phone.
2. Wait For a Minute After Boot- Let the system settle down after booting up.
3. Slim Your ROMs By Yourself- I will post How to slim your own ROMs here soon, I will add link to it when available. (delete audio, ringtones, notifications, cmwallpapers.apk, livewallpapers.apk, picotts.apk, tts folder (if there is), fonts no needed)
4. Recommended Settings: CPU Governor: SmartAssH3, I/O Scheduler: SIO, zRam: 26%, Allow purging of assets, Kernel sametime merging, 16bit Transparency, Disabled Boot Animation.
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5. Use Light Launchers- The Home is where you visit mostly, the start of every activity. So, use light and fast launchers. (Go Launcher Not Recommended)
6. Delete Apps When You Do Not Use It- Delete apps you do not use, save space and be faster.
7. Delete Cache of Apps Using Cache Cleaner- Cache take up large partition of your memory. Delete it with cache cleaner.
8. Delete Call Records and Browser History If Not Necessary- Deleting call records and browser history can free up lot of space.
9. Do Not Use Task Killers- There are lots of controversy about them, because they force apps to be closed when they are not to be closed. Instead, long press Home Button and swipe apps you do not want to use in your background.
10. Keep Your Home Screens Light As Possible- Adding many widgets, shortcuts etc on home screen makes your phone much slower.
11. Lock Your Launcher In Memory- It makes your launcher take part of your memory, prevents it from restarting launchers.​
MORE TIPS SOON! ​
pongnamu said:
Hi everyone!
I am going to give you some tips for making your X10 Mini and Pro fast as possible, without breaking your hardware.
I am running JellyBean, and the guide is optimized for JellyBean, but you can surely apply in other versions as well.
1. Do Not Overclock- With overclocking, it makes your CPU work harder than what it can handle. It may result in damages of your phone.
2. Wait For a Minute After Boot- Let the system settle down after booting up.
3. Slim Your ROMs By Yourself- I will post How to slim your own ROMs here soon, I will add link to it when available.
4. Recommended Settings: CPU Governor: SmartAssH3, I/O Scheduler: SIO, zRam: 26%, Allow purging of assets, Kernel sametime merging, 16bit Transparency, Disabled Boot Animation.
5. Use Light Launchers- The Home is where you visit mostly, the start of every activity. So, use light and fast launchers. (Go Launcher Not Recommended)
6. Delete Apps When You Do Not Use It- Delete apps you do not use, save space and be faster.
7. Delete Cache of Apps Using Cache Cleaner- Cache take up large partition of your memory. Delete it with cache cleaner.
8. Delete Call Records and Browser History If Not Necessary- Deleting call records and browser history can free up lot of space.
9. Do Not Use Task Killers- There are lots of controversy about them, because they force apps to be closed when they are not to be closed. Instead, long press Home Button and swipe apps you do not want to use in your background.
10. Keep Your Home Screens Light As Possible- Adding many widgets, shortcuts etc on home screen makes your phone much slower.
11. Lock Your Launcher In Memory- It makes your launcher take part of your memory, prevents it from restarting launchers.​
MORE TIPS SOON! ​
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for guide, pongnamu:good:
R: [GUIDE] How To Make Your X10 Mini and Pro Faster | Last Update March 30, 2013
Most important step is this: delete audio, ringtones, notifications, cmwallpapers.apk, livewallpapers.apk, picotts.apk, tts folder (if there is), fonts no needed (usally they occupy 2~5mb) before you flash rom. These things occupy about 15~20mb in every rom. Add this steps if u want
Sent from my U20i using xda app-developers app
Chuck95 said:
Most important step is this: delete audio, ringtones, notifications, cmwallpapers.apk, livewallpapers.apk, picotts.apk, tts folder (if there is), fonts no needed (usally they occupy 2~5mb) before you flash rom. These things occupy about 15~20mb in every rom. Add this steps if u want
Sent from my U20i using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Okay I will
thanks for sharing, i will try it
Thank you!
☜ Enviado desde mi u20a ☞
Chuck95 said:
Most important step is this: delete audio, ringtones, notifications, cmwallpapers.apk, livewallpapers.apk, picotts.apk, tts folder (if there is), fonts no needed (usally they occupy 2~5mb) before you flash rom. These things occupy about 15~20mb in every rom. Add this steps if u want
Sent from my U20i using xda app-developers app
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which fonts are not neccessary so i can delete?
R: [GUIDE] How To Make Your X10 Mini and Pro Faster | Last Update March 30, 2013
Fonts bigger than 1mb
Sent from my U20i using xda app-developers app
SmartssH3 is the balance on perfomance and battery, for better perfomance, can try SmartssV2.
About overclock, i used X10 mini pro for 1.5 years overclocked to 691Mhz, and never got a problem with CPU.
Zram vs Swap, i you want a lot of multitasking, use SWAP on a SDCARD class 10, 100% recommended. but i you only use music, call, browser, ZRAM is enough
in my phone, when I'm used purging asset and KSM, my phone turned to slow, after that, I'm not changed everything,
Chuck95 said:
Most important step is this: delete audio, ringtones, notifications, cmwallpapers.apk, livewallpapers.apk, picotts.apk, tts folder (if there is), fonts no needed (usally they occupy 2~5mb) before you flash rom. These things occupy about 15~20mb in every rom. Add this steps if u want
Sent from my U20i using xda app-developers app
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how to delete that's thing ??
sory my english bad
q-doth said:
how to delete that's thing ??
sory my english bad
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before flash zip open it and go to system/fonts and here delete the biggest ones
go to media/audio and delete all ringtones, sound and notifications that you don't need
delete all unnecessary apps like cmwallpapers, live wallpapers, radio if you don't use it widgets
And if you want you can replace apps with someone smaller (size and ram value)
After did this you can flash your zip!
Chuck95 said:
before flash zip open it and go to system/fonts and here delete the biggest ones
go to media/audio and delete all ringtones, sound and notifications that you don't need
delete all unnecessary apps like cmwallpapers, live wallpapers, radio if you don't use it widgets
And if you want you can replace apps with someone smaller (size and ram value)
After did this you can flash your zip!
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thank you bro
i will try it now
q-doth said:
thank you bro
i will try it now
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you're welcome
From FAQ xperia mini
Originally Posted by jorz21 View Post
More free space
with rootexplorer /system/usr/zi
delete the languages that you dont need.
system/usr/keyboard-config-languages-delete all languages that you dont need...
/system/fonts delete arabic(1.1mb)fallback(3.47mb)japannese(1.12mb)
/system/media/audio-delete all the sounds that you dont need..
Really?
Deleting files makes phone faster? How come?
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus
bat0nas said:
Really?
Deleting files makes phone faster? How come?
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus
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deleting files make RAM free sir
Ok.
Is there a list of „safe to delete from miniCM7” then?
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus
bat0nas said:
Ok.
Is there a list of „safe to delete from miniCM7” then?
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus
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Well it may not be a list of CM7 specific but it is a good guideline to what is the good, the bad and the wasteful. I'm working on something to try and remove around 90% of the OS and make it the most basic system for a standalone GPS....
I cant post an outside link yet but if you google "oldwiki barebones cyanogenmod" it should give you a good idea of what your looking for...
Thanks Great info!
Chuck95 said:
Most important step is this: delete audio, ringtones, notifications, cmwallpapers.apk, livewallpapers.apk, picotts.apk, tts folder (if there is), fonts no needed (usally they occupy 2~5mb) before you flash rom. These things occupy about 15~20mb in every rom. Add this steps if u want
Sent from my U20i using xda app-developers app
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I noticed very good performance after trying what you said thanks:good:

Several questions and problems from rooted S3

Hi guys, I recently just rooted my SGS3 and I am experiencing some problems and have some questions to ask, I've tried my best to search for similar topics but they mostly didn't have a solution.
I am currently using SlimBean Build 5 & 020513-0832-cm10.1-i9300-linux3076-LINARO-temasek kernel
1) After I rooted my S3 and installed SlimBean, when I try to charge my S3 turned off, it is stuck at the processing screen and the LED doesn't light up. So how do I fix this?
{
"lightbox_close": "Close",
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"lightbox_error": "The requested content cannot be loaded. Please try again later.",
"lightbox_start_slideshow": "Start slideshow",
"lightbox_stop_slideshow": "Stop slideshow",
"lightbox_full_screen": "Full screen",
"lightbox_thumbnails": "Thumbnails",
"lightbox_download": "Download",
"lightbox_share": "Share",
"lightbox_zoom": "Zoom",
"lightbox_new_window": "New window",
"lightbox_toggle_sidebar": "Toggle sidebar"
}
2) My current RAM usage is usually around 400MB+ (excluding cached apps), even with the recent apps completely cleared off. I've checked the Running Apps in the Settings and the numbers just don't add up. Any idea what might be causing this high RAM usage? (If I wanted this kind of high RAM usage, I would have stuck with stock TouchWiz ROM)
3) Considering I'm using SlimBean and Temasek Kernel, what Governer & I/O scheduler combo would you recommend for a balance between battery and performance? I am currently using Pegasusq & DEADLINE (with my current settings, less than 5 mins of using the phone just to scroll around would decrease the battery percentage by 1%) or are there any other kernels that would out perform the Temasek Kernel?
4) Because I've been experiencing some slight stuttering, I OCed my S3 to 1.5GHz, is it actually helping because I definetely still experience some slight stuttering or does it just cause battery drain and unnecessary heating up.
5) Do settings that I set using Trickster Mod and Slim Settings affect phone performance (battery drain, heating up, high RAM usage, etc)? E.g Digital Noise Reduction Control/High Dynamic Range Control/Digital Edge Enchancement Control and in Slim Settings mDNle Scenarios.
EDIT: New Questions
6) Here are some screenshots of 1. SlimBean's Performance settings 2. Trickster Mod 3.STweaks
As you can see, even thou the settings in SlimBean say that zRAM is enabled, it doesn't in TricksterMod and STweaks.
Also, same thing for I/O scheduler, 1. SlimBean Performance and 2.STweaks
So which settings do I use/follow?
1. It is normal, the screen will be in dark momentarily. Try long press power button 2 or 3 times to boot up , if it doesn't, wait for screen goes dark and then long press power button. or better yet, unplug charger !
2. That could be various reasons, for example some apps would have cached process which isn't running but loaded in RAM, also some RAM is occupied by necessary and essential Android System Process. It's natural of Android, and as Android has different kinda memory management that unlike windows, don't mind it, let it do its job.
3. Don't ask questions like that, such subject is forbidden in XDA for "what's best ", try for yourself.
4. can't say, consider the difference between android and iOS, you may still feel "stutter" even you overclock up to 3 Ghz. It is natural of Android, can't really help, but I would suggest you stay with 1.4, some system tweak and nice kernel with good configuration will diminish 99% of non-necessary "stutter ", again, don't ask which ones, you have to try for yourself.
5. Absolutely! Such setting is crucial!
Be careful of it if you don't what does any option mean!
Sent from my GT-I9300 using xda premium
qtwrk said:
1. It is normal, the screen will be in dark momentarily. Try long press power button 2 or 3 times to boot up , if it doesn't, wait for screen goes dark and then long press power button. or better yet, unplug charger !
2. That could be various reasons, for example some apps would have cached process which isn't running but loaded in RAM, also some RAM is occupied by necessary and essential Android System Process. It's natural of Android, and as Android has different kinda memory management that unlike windows, don't mind it, let it do its job.
3. Don't ask questions like that, such subject is forbidden in XDA for "what's best ", try for yourself.
4. can't say, consider the difference between android and iOS, you may still feel "stutter" even you overclock up to 3 Ghz. It is natural of Android, can't really help, but I would suggest you stay with 1.4, some system tweak and nice kernel with good configuration will diminish 99% of non-necessary "stutter ", again, don't ask which ones, you have to try for yourself.
5. Absolutely! Such setting is crucial!
Be careful of it if you don't what does any option mean!
Sent from my GT-I9300 using xda premium
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Thanks for answering
1) Yeah, there's no problem with it other than the charging animation not working (Boots up fine), it's just gets stuck there, even while it fades away, when I press the home button, it still just shows this exact screen.
3) Not really a matter of "what's best", just what are the usual settings people use with this ROM & Kernal combination to prevent excessive battery drain and such.
FrydaeXIII said:
Thanks for answering
3) Not really a matter of "what's best", just what are the usual settings people use with this ROM & Kernal combination to prevent excessive battery drain and such.
Then you have to read the relevant rom and kernel threads as no such settings are posted on XDA .
jje
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FrydaeXIII said:
Thanks for answering
1) Yeah, there's no problem with it other than the charging animation not working (Boots up fine), it's just gets stuck there, even while it fades away, when I press the home button, it still just shows this exact screen.
3) Not really a matter of "what's best", just what are the usual settings people use with this ROM & Kernal combination to prevent excessive battery drain and such.
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That's exactly the point, each kernel, ROM has countless users who like it, and some peopke stick with one ROM or kernel in particular, but some people, like me, are keep moving around from one to another, so you ask 100 people here you will here 100 different answer,
Just try of them, you will know
Sent from my GT-I9300 using xda premium
there is an app called android tweaker.. try it and undervolt your cpu.. use less brightness
actually there are some roms dedicated for battery life..
Posted a new question
use any ONE app for tweaking, stweaks is better
and if you need RAM, as i mentioned above use android tweaker, it has everything
battery life tweaks, audio, screen, ram managing, and many other cool mods like BE2..
and there is no problem if you use slim settings, but trickster and stweaks depends upon on kernel
BHARGAV33 said:
use any ONE app for tweaking, stweaks is better
and if you need RAM, as i mentioned above use android tweaker, it has everything
battery life tweaks, audio, screen, ram managing, and many other cool mods like BE2..
and there is no problem if you use slim settings, but trickster and stweaks depends upon on kernel
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Click to collapse
Can I use Pimp My ROM instead? I see they have almost similar features and Pimp My ROM is free. Also can it fully replace STweaks or do I leave that installed?
yeah.. i forgot about pimp my rom, you can use that..
yeah sure,you can just leave the stweaks installed

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