Tips to boost your Andriod device
Important tips to increase Android’s performance
As it is with any other desktop
or mobile operating system, the performance of your Android OS will
start to diminish after you use it for some time. Mobile operating systems are
supposed to be lighter and faster to keep up with our need to be on the move,
yet still give us access to everything.
If you have noticed that your
Android phones performance have been ‘slowing down’, particularly after you’ve
been loading it up with tons of Android apps (we don’t blame you) from the
Google Play store, we have a few tips to share with you.
1. Know Your Device
It is important that you learn
about the capabilities and drawbacks of your phone. Don’t overburden
your phone with resource-hungry apps which would otherwise degrade your phone’s
performance at your expense.
2. Update Your Android
If you haven’t updated your
Android phone to the latest firmware (OS / System updates), you should do it
today. Google (the maker of andriod) brings great improvements to each new
release of the Android operating system, including updates that ensure
stability, higher performance speed and connectivity along with other
user-friendly new features.
3. Remove Unwanted Apps
Every app you install in your
phone take some storage space and runs some background processes.
The more storage space occupied or the more
background processes running on your phone, the slower your phone’s
performance.
Don’t install apps you hardly
use. Keep only the apps that you need and if you have got an app that
isn’t really useful, you can uninstall or disable it.
4. Disable Unnecessary Apps
‘Performance assistant’ was
introduced in Android ICS to help you disable apps that you don’t need.
Disabling apps is different from uninstalling apps – uninstallation remove
application files from the phone but no file is removed/deleted when you
disable it. These disabled apps are not shown on the home screen or app
tray but you can re-enable them for use whenever you need them.
5. Update Apps
You should regularly update your
phone’s installed apps from Google Play OR update notification which usually
notifies you in the top of your phone screen (Notification area). Try to get
updates your apps when they are available in Google Play. Developers fix bugs
and add features in new released versions of apps. Updated apps perform
better and faster, and will less likely crash your phone.
6. Use High-Speed Memory Card
The memory card is the storage space of your phone. Phones
with low internal memory can get a boost from high-capacity memory cards for
maximum storage space. But it adds not only capacity but also speed to the
mix. You can get between 2GB to 32GB worth of storage space to support high
speed read/write operations. Always go for memory cards of Class 6 or Class 10
for your Android phone if you seek performance for your phone. Before
purchasing a memory card you can check its class. Preferably you can purchase
Micro SD Card of the same brand you are using your mobile device. For Samsung, Samsung
sd card is available and Sony, sony sd is available and so on.
7. Keep Fewer Widgets
Widgets are not apps, which only
run once you choose to activate them. No, widgets are always running in
the background; they are active all the time. While some Android users use it
to keep track of the weather, and their important dates, others use widgets
like ‘Extended controls’ for quick access for essential configurations such as
switching Wi-Fi, Bluetooth or their GPS on or off.
They do have their uses but bear
in mind that having too many of them running on your homescreen will
cause your device’s performance to slow down.
8. Avoid Live Wallpapers
You must be loving Android’s live
wallpaper feature. Phones (from different manufacturers) come with different
live wallpapers but you should know that live wallpapers that are badly made
will need more CPU cycles to run, thus draining the battery faster.
Everytime you activate the home screen, you run not only your apps but also
your live wallpaper.
9. Stop Syncing
Sync is a very good feature which
synchronizes your data with Google servers. Keeping sync on, you can get
notifications whenever new mail comes in or when you get new notifications or
updates for apps. To do this, it does a refresh at every preset interval (e.g.
it checks your mail every 5 minutes for new incoming mail), and this will eat
into your android’s performance for other activities.
You can keep Sync off for
unrequired services or only have it on when you need to transfer or upload
materials to Google servers.
10. Turn Off Animations
What animations? Well, if you
haven’t noticed, your phone screen actually fades out and in as you switch from
one task to the other. To see this in action Go to Settings > Developer
Options > Window Animation Scale > Animation scale 10x. Then choose Window
Animation Scale again to see the fade in effect in ‘slow-mo’.
When you choose Animation
off, the screen just snaps to position without animation. You can also turn off Transition
Animation Scale in the same way. If you are a heavy user, you’d probably
notice that your Android performs faster with all animations off.
Leave your comments about how did
you liked this blog and help me improving my blogs. You can reach me via
comments on my blogging page. You can post your questions and suggestions too in the comments.
Regards,
Neil
Comments