Im looking for a Data Monitor. But no the usual an app that tells you how much data you have used during a period of time. Im looking something like a process manager, but for data. An app where I can see which app is currently using data, kinda like a live streaming data monitor.
I've already look but all I could find is the typical app shows the data usage.
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Okay so let me say first that google music beta has made my music life a million times easier, it saves me space on my mem card an things like that. So, my question is, if I turn the "temporarily cache music" choice off in the settings, how much data does google music still use? Because I recently changed my plan to 200mb limited data usage, an I wanted to know whether or not turning off the cache still made the phone use data to stream, thanks so much in advance XDA
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Hi there,
Here is a data usage calculator tool:
"t-mobile.com/Tools/MBCalculator.aspx"
If you stream 30 minutes of music every day in a 30 day billing cycle your total usage would be roughly 900MB. There are 1024MB in every 1GB to put it in perspective. Streaming video and music is not recommended for plans under 2GB. On limited plans, it is a good idea to connect to wifi as much as possible.
Hope that helps!
I really only stream music at home (using wifi) and I have my favorite music on my memory card (for on the go). I can't thank you enough for replying to my post! And yes it helps greatly! I cut the data plan down because I needed a load off on the bill (most economic thing to do), so thank you once again
Sent from my T-Mobile myTouch 3G Slide using XDA App
Glad it helped,
I realize I did not address your question about the caching feature:
Weather or not you enable caching, data is still being used to stream your music from the google server. However, by turning caching on (which is turned on by default on the android app) your phone stores memory of recently played music files. This means that without connecting to a data network you can still play some music.
Better yet, you can choose specific songs to be cached to your phone by opening the google music application and long pressing on a song. From there an option should pop up that says "Available offline" and you can check the box. Just make sure to cache the songs you want while your on wifi because the act of caching does use data.
Once cached you can play those specific songs back anytime w/out using any data!
blastindamusic said:
Glad it helped,
I realize I did not address your question about the caching feature:
Weather or not you enable caching, data is still being used to stream your music from the google server. However, by turning caching on (which is turned on by default on the android app) your phone stores memory of recently played music files. This means that without connecting to a data network you can still play some music.
Better yet, you can choose specific songs to be cached to your phone by opening the google music application and long pressing on a song. From there an option should pop up that says "Available offline" and you can check the box. Just make sure to cache the songs you want while your on wifi because the act of caching does use data.
Once cached you can play those specific songs back anytime w/out using any data!
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Hi I recently downloaded Google music and I transferred my songs to my device, and I made those songs available offline, so if I set my Google music app to offline will I still he charged for using data if I'm only playing the songs I set for offline use?
just turn the setting on that says "Stream over Wi-Fi only" to be on the safe side
Hi..In the data usage screen, 25.3 mb of data used by android operating system in 2 days..can anyone please advise what is this...? Can we control it...?. I was using nexus s before and it was using a very less data for this....
Please help
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If you click further on "Android System", it will tell you how much data was foreground data and how much it was background data. If you recently added your Google account, it's normal to have a lot of data transferred for the first sync.
Well it could be as the person above stated. However, maybe you've set it up so it syncs every hour? or weather syncs every 30 mins? There could be a whole variety of things that could increase your data usage.
I'm new to the S3, I used the Facebook app for few minutes and surf two pages of web pages, my data usage went to 9MB, I only get 100MB data a month, is there a way to compress internet data to use less?
Lither said:
I'm new to the S3, I used the Facebook app for few minutes and surf two pages of web pages, my data usage went to 9MB, I only get 100MB data a month, is there a way to compress internet data to use less?
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The facebook app or any app for that matter would download HQ images to fit the screen. Any compression that you'd want to use will be affect the image clarity. At the end of the day its upto you how you make this tradeoff between quality and quantity.
To save on data usage you could try using the opera mini browser or similar..
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I was checking my battery status in settings and noticed Media Server has taken 56% of my battery, and has caused my phone to stay awake for over 18 hours and has almost 5 hours of CPU time. I have been getting over a days worth of battery with 4-5 hours of screen on time, I am currently at 22 hours with only 1.5 hours of screen on time. I don't see a way to stop it from running in Application Manager.
Is there a way to stop this process from keeping my phone awake? Is this connected with any particular application, or called something else in Application Manager?
I'm having the same issue as well.
I've seen it take a decent chunk more than once. Only like 15% at max so I'm not doing nearly as bad though. I'm curious about what it is exactly as well.
flaring afro said:
I've seen it take a decent chunk more than once. Only like 15% at max so I'm not doing nearly as bad though. I'm curious about what it is exactly as well.
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Click to collapse
Yeah I have always noticed it on my list, but it was never a huge drain on the battery. Like you said in the 15% range, all of the sudden though it just jumped up to over 50%. I can't think of an application I have used to make it use such a huge chunk of my battery.
So I went back into Application Manager and noticed under the Running tab that there was a "Show cached processes" option in the top right corner. Under that there was a Media application listed that uses the "android.process.media" process. Any chance that this could be related to the Media Server, or am I heading in the wrong direction?
I have recharged and restarted my phone, and Media Server is back down to 6% after discharging for 5 hours. I would just like to know what I possibly did to make my battery drain so quickly. I haven't watched any movies or videos and Pandora is the only time I listen to music on my phone.
According to my research, the media service covers scanning your internal and external sdcards for media files, including music, pictures and videos. If one file is corrupted in some way, it can cause the service to hang. That said, mine was doing the same thing. There's an app on the play store called Media Rescan Root that blocks the service at boot. The stock media player, player pro, and probably others use the media service to find new songs added to the sdcard. I switched over to PowerAmp which does its own search which doesn't hang like that. That's what I reccomend.
Sent from my GN2 using XDA Premium HD app
Do you have Drive installed?
I had the same issue with media server eating up about 60% battery. I have Google Drive installed and have around 1gb data in it. In accounts my sync settings were set to always sync Drive. I unchecked this and the media server issue seemed to have been resolved.See if this helps you.
_paradox said:
I had the same issue with media server eating up about 60% battery. I have Google Drive installed and have around 1gb data in it. In accounts my sync settings were set to always sync Drive. I unchecked this and the media server issue seemed to have been resolved.See if this helps you.
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I unchecked media sync, and put back in my SD card, which has about 12 gb of music on it. Within 10 minutes, the media scanner jumped from .02% to 12%, so this didn't seem to make a difference for me.
TallgeeseIV said:
According to my research, the media service covers scanning your internal and external sdcards for media files, including music, pictures and videos. If one file is corrupted in some way, it can cause the service to hang. That said, mine was doing the same thing. There's an app on the play store called Media Rescan Root that blocks the service at boot. The stock media player, player pro, and probably others use the media service to find new songs added to the sdcard. I switched over to PowerAmp which does its own search which doesn't hang like that. That's what I reccomend.
Sent from my GN2 using XDA Premium HD app
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Click to collapse
Same thing happened to me. Mine turned out to be m4a files that were causing. I removed them and no longer see mediaserver power drain.
I read a forum a few days ago that talked about wifi causing the media service drain. They said to set a static IP address instead of dynamic and that would solve the problem. I spend most of my time on wifi so this makes a little bit of sense to me. I have set a static address and so far today my media service has remained at 3%. I don't have the link to the forum right now but I'll try to find it again and link to it later.
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Edit: Apparently that did not last long. My Media Server stayed down at 2% for several hours but then for no aparent reason it spiked up to its current usage of 31% (2hr CPU time and 7hr of Stay Awake). I would really like to know what is causing this.
Samsung Xcover3, Marshmallow, unrooted, noob.
Is there a way to export (as CSV for example) storage, and possibly data transfer, stats per application?
I'm using an oldish phone with limited storage as a bike GPS, and mainly just go online through wifi to get maps and the occasional app I might want to add. I'm using NoRoot firewall to limit what can get through, but I find that G**gle etc manage to squeeze a lot of stuff down which I don't necessarily want. So for now I'd like to be able to export lists of installed apps with their storage, before and after wifi connection, to see if I can understand what's coming down, and what I can block or delete later.
Is there such an app? Or can I interrogate Android for that info from a connected Linux machine?
In the longer term I'll think about taking control of the device with a new OS, but for now I'd like to try the above.