Related
Hi!
I have a new Galaxy Tab S 8.4 and have successfully rooted it and frozen some apps with Debloater on my PC. Debloater is really nice but what I am looking for is a PC software like Debloater itself - but - with the ability to save a list of all frozen apps.
Is there something in the Android universe for this?
It would be great because when I register a new user on my tablet the first time setup seems to need some/most of the bloatware to end the register process (right now it crashes all the time ).
Thank you for any hints on this!
Hi, Greenify keeps losing access to the accessibility service for some reason. It happens after a few minutes of using the phone, not even a reboot is required to get it unticked again. Then when I try to hibernate+lock screen again, it says that it requires the service for automation to work.
Phone: Huawei Mate 7
System: KitKat 4.4.4
Greenify: latest version
Root? No (Greenify set on non-root mode)
Accessibility activated for Greenify? Yes but keeps getting unticked all the time and asks me to enable automation again and again!
Greenify device administrator? Yes
Donation package? Yes.
Anyone?
Have you noticed any clue on when and what caused the stop of accessibility service?
If you device memory is running low, it may be killed by Android system for more memory for foreground app, especially when playing large game.
oasisfeng said:
Have you noticed any clue on when and what caused the stop of accessibility service?
If you device memory is running low, it may be killed by Android system for more memory for foreground app, especially when playing large game.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No it does it all the time, after a few minutes usually. If I lock the screen within a minute or two, it works fine, it later than that, the hibernation service is normally turned off already.
Other Info
Any other updates on this issue? I was running Greenify on my Galaxy S5 with no issues. I just changed over to an S6 Edge and now I'm getting the same problem with Greenify losing its Accessibility permissions. No rhyme or reason for when it happens. I'm not running any big applications or games. I have a few other apps that need Accessibility authorization and those never seem to lose their access like Greenify does.
Same Problem on my new Galaxy S6 edge. Any help to solve the problem would be greatly appreciated.
This can solved by removing Greenify from Protected Apps or in the case of non Huawei phones by disabling battery optimisation for greenify or the app in question.
On my phone gets it often after I kill the any application with /long press/back button. Rooted, CM13
this happen as well with OOS 3.2.1 on OnePlus 3
if you decide to clear recents and the memory as well, it will straight away losing the accesibility access..
Is there an established reason for this?! Reinstalling and add power-saving exception doesn't seem to being helpful.
Issue started after update to android 8. On previous versions never had a tiny problem.
Sent from taptalk
SuperSU doesn't seem to be working the way it always has on my other devices in the past. After successfully flashing TWRP 2.8.7.0 [6.0] EN (by Sminki *xda* repack) on my Honor 7 with multi-tool and then installing SuperSU via TWRP and gaining root access, I rebooted my phone and immediately Google Play wanted me to update the SuperSU app. I updated the SuperSU app and also installed SuperSU Pro that I had purchased previously on another device. I then installed terminal emulator so I could confirm that I had root access by running the su command. However after running the terminal emulator and attempting to use the su command nothing happened. I didn't get an error that I would expect if root wasn't present such as su not found, it just seems to sit there waiting. It then occurred to me that I hadn't received the usual popup from SuperSU asking me whether I wanted to grant root permission.
From what I have been able to work out I do have root access but for whatever reason SuperSU is not displaying its message asking me to grant or deny access. I have managed to establish that I do have root by going into the SuperSU settings and setting the default access as grant rather than prompt after which terminal emulator is able to use the su command.
Does anyone know how I can get the prompt to work? I would rather have SuperSU prompt me when an app requests root access for security reasons since giving any app that requests root unfettered access probably isn't the best idea.
If your problem has anything to do with SSU Pro then I dont say nothing cause dont use it.
Anyway going the same procedure as you I had, after GPlay update, the problem when trying to open SSU with message "SSU binary cant be found" or sth like this. However my SSU has been working (at least it did look alike) giving prompts.
The solution was SSU cleanup, copying and installing SSU once again. If you check some threads here you will find some kinds of initial problems with SSU are quite common.
It looks like it is H7 speciality ;p. You need to flash B330 twice for 100% and you need to install SSU twice ;p
ps. Also "Draw over other apps" on but it was automatic - at least for me
adxuser said:
If your problem has anything to do with SSU Pro then I dont say nothing cause dont use it.
Anyway going the same procedure as you I had, after GPlay update, the problem when trying to open SSU with message "SSU binary cant be found" or sth like this. However my SSU has been working (at least it did look alike) giving prompts.
The solution was SSU cleanup, copying and installing SSU once again. If you check some threads here you will find some kinds of initial problems with SSU are quite common.
It looks like it is H7 speciality ;p. You need to flash B330 twice for 100% and you need to install SSU twice ;p
ps. Also "Draw over other apps" on but it was automatic - at least for me
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks. Seems to be working now. Also disabling doze altogether on marshmallow seems to have solved a lot of other issues I was having since the marshmallow update and subsequent custom recovery and root install.
Squall88uk said:
disabling doze altogether on marshmallow
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
By "Doze" you mean those switches to kill apps after screen lock or not?
adxuser said:
By "Doze" you mean those switches to kill apps after screen lock or not?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No I mean Marshmallows built in doze feature. I have the switches you're talking about set to let the app keep running for important apps like SuperSU anyway but they only affect EMUIs own power manager. Doze and EMUIs power manager seem to fight each other anyway and I don't like how doze stops my notifications coming through with some apps and interferes with other apps that I like to leave running all the time like AcDisplay.
I completely disabled doze altogether using "dumpsys deviceidle disable" in terminal emulator or using adb shell. The only problem is that it will be re-enabled after a reboot so I used the universal init.d app to run an init.d script on every boot to disable it again since the honor 7 kernel doesn't natively support init.d. I have all the apps that I had on lollipop (plus some more that I didn't have on lollipop, since I didn't have root when I used lollipop) set up exactly the way they were then and let EMUI handle the power management. I get about the same battery life that I had in lollipop which is fine for me since I charge it fully every night anyway.
I am just in process of developing opinion on that. For sure made one mistake prefering Google Clock over Huawei (and uninstalling the latter) but now even with adequate settings (for example it should have auto-start set by PM Plus add-on for Phone Manager) I am not so sure of my alarms ; ) I have been accustomed to Vanilla Android till now.
Ok. I had to do my lecture on MM Doze & App Standby functions. Also I am newbie on EMUI.
It looks like that many important things (background GPS runnings apps, notifications, alarms) can be double complicated on MM Huawei :/ (not to mention other EMUI problems e.g. with lock screen)
We have clean MM Android with its problems even for Nexus owners, then we have EMUI with its own background / notifications problems.
So 'Ignore optimisations' switch is by Google. You do not use it but maybe know which Google / Huawei apps should have optimizations off? (I have there Android System WebView - why? Google product should have it invisible, Fused Locations - the same, HiSuite ?, HwAps ?)
Anyway people report that it does not help for GPS tracking apps shutdown problems, but it is rather related to EMUI I think.
PS. 1. I do not think Huawei / Google power managers fight in any way. Huawei power manager stricly speaking these are drivers for hardware needed + basic user power handling setup.
What they did on higher level is this "keeps running after screen off" switch but I would not be so sure if this, set one or the other way (and Huawei soft in general), works properly with GCM messages and other wakeups. One should keep in mind that Huawei sells a lot without Google apps at all.
PS.1.b. Some apps need some changes to work properly with Doze. They are not allowed now to do what they like and when they like. And if they have to say sth they must use GCM message , if they have sth important to say they must use GCM high priority message. Android 5.1 API level 22 alarms do not fire now, there are 2 new methods from what I read. And Google could block spamming "high priority messages". So idea & direction is good I think. For not MM updated apps put them in Ignored.
PS2. In my opinion also you should not confuse B330 power handling issues with Doze.
It could be just Huawei optimizing things: taking away fast charging switch because it is on default now, making changes to power handling etc. or not making changes needed so now it could be the problem with Android. People claiming worse battery life for B330 claim mostly best on B320.
adxuser said:
For sure made one mistake prefering Google Clock over Huawei (and uninstalling the latter) but now even with adequate settings (for example it should have auto-start set by PM Plus add-on for Phone Manager) I am not so sure of my alarms ; ) I have been accustomed to Vanilla Android till now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What's wrong with the Google clock? And what problems did you have after uninstalling the Huawei clock? I use the Google clock as my main clock app and have had no issues with it on either lollipop or marshmallow even after uninstalling the Huawei clock.
adxuser said:
Ok. I had to do my lecture on MM Doze & App Standby functions. Also I am newbie on EMUI.
It looks like that many important things (background GPS runnings apps, notifications, alarms) can be double complicated on MM Huawei :/ (not to mention other EMUI problems e.g. with lock screen)
We have clean MM Android with its problems even for Nexus owners, then we have EMUI with its own background / notifications problems.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Agreed. While EMUI does have some of its own features that can be useful a lot of things are twice as complicated as they need to be. I have generally found that just allowing all apps that have notifications you want to receive e.g. twitter set to be allowed to autostart and run in the background as much as they like seems to reduce issues with notifications (still not worked out if it completely stopped any issues), and even then if I want notifications to display correctly on the lockscreen, not only do I need to allow them for each particular app on the lockscreen through the notification manager I still have to use a lockscreen replacement which in my case is AcDisplay. To be honest I have every app set to run on autostart and in the background and I still haven't found that it has much impact on battery life and this seems to solves a lot of these kinds of issues for me. My previous phone (Samsung Galaxy A3) used touchwiz and never had any of these options so I've always assumed that touchwiz/android allowed apps to run when they wanted and access what they wanted within the scope of their permissions and everything always worked fine, admittedly battery life was an issue on that phone but it had a much smaller battery capacity than the Honor 7 and it still lasted me most of a day.
adxuser said:
So 'Ignore optimisations' switch is by Google. You do not use it but maybe know which Google / Huawei apps should have optimizations off? (I have there Android System WebView - why? Google product should have it invisible, Fused Locations - the same, HiSuite ?, HwAps ?)
Anyway people report that it does not help for GPS tracking apps shutdown problems, but it is rather related to EMUI I think.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I tried messing with the Ignore optimisations switch when I first upgraded to Marshmallow and it didn't seem to make any difference apps were still being afflicted with issues. I asked honor uk exactly what it did and whether it was for doze or not and they didn't know. I'm sure if I spoke Chinese and asked the Chinese customer service they would be able to tell me straight away but I never managed to find out. Even with doze disabled completely on my device I still have it set to ignore optimisations for all apps in case its something to do with EMUI.
adxuser said:
PS. 1. I do not think Huawei / Google power managers fight in any way. Huawei power manager stricly speaking these are drivers for hardware needed + basic user power handling setup.
What they did on higher level is this "keeps running after screen off" switch but I would not be so sure if this, set one or the other way (and Huawei soft in general), works properly with GCM messages and other wakeups. One should keep in mind that Huawei sells a lot without Google apps at all.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What I meant by fight is that the 2 have their own settings rather than these being integrated with each other. So for example when specify that I want an app to be able to run in the background while the screen is off in an ideal world this would also tell Google's doze that I do not want it to doze that app. otherwise I have to effectively set the same thing twice even though it may be called different things.
adxuser said:
PS.1.b. Some apps need some changes to work properly with Doze. They are not allowed now to do what they like and when they like. And if they have to say sth they must use GCM message , if they have sth important to say they must use GCM high priority message. Android 5.1 API level 22 alarms do not fire now, there are 2 new methods from what I read. And Google could block spamming "high priority messages". So idea & direction is good I think. For not MM updated apps put them in Ignored.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I like the idea of doze in general and I'm generally a fan of most things that google do with android. If i was running a nexus or an AOSP rom I would definitely leave doze activated and only disable its optimization for apps that either coded with doze in mind or apps which I personally consider to be high priority regardless of whether google agrees such as twitter. I lie to get twitter notification that I have enabled as soon as the tweet they link to is tweeted not at the intervals that doze allows apps to update at. But that's a personal thing rather than an issue with the idea. So for YouTube notifications for example I would be quite happy for doze to run the show.
adxuser said:
PS2. In my opinion also you should not confuse B330 power handling issues with Doze.
It could be just Huawei optimizing things: taking away fast charging switch because it is on default now, making changes to power handling etc. or not making changes needed so now it could be the problem with Android. People claiming worse battery life for B330 claim mostly best on B320.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My intention has never been to confuse EMUI's power handling with Doze. I have just been trying to simplify the issue for me. as I have already said I generally allow any apps to do what they want both in EMUI's settings and by disabling doze as its simpler that way for me. Battery has never been an issue for me with either lollipop (B180) or marshmallow (B330) for me personally but i'm sure for some people it can be.
Squall88uk said:
What's wrong with the Google clock? And what problems did you have after uninstalling the Huawei clock? I use the Google clock as my main clock app and have had no issues with it on either lollipop or marshmallow even after uninstalling the Huawei clock.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
nothing wrong, in fact I've chosen it deliberately.
Basically prefer Google apps cause they can be updated and whats more new features are added from time to time, with let's say B330 stock you are left with B330 stock unless and if Huawei pushes sth new.
Just for some producers ROM's there are sometimes apps good enough and also interconnected on some levels with launcher / lock screen / power management that it is better to leave them & even make use of them.
Squall88uk said:
Even with doze disabled completely on my device I still have it set to ignore optimisations for all apps in case its something to do with EMUI.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Rather strange for me what you're doing.
Squall88uk said:
What I meant by fight is that the 2 have their own settings rather than these being integrated with each other. So for example when specify that I want an app to be able to run in the background while the screen is off in an ideal world this would also tell Google's doze that I do not want it to doze that app. otherwise I have to effectively set the same thing twice even though it may be called different things.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It cant be integrated, it is Google licensed system. Doze & App standby these are powerfull, long-term features.
This EMUI function is just easy switch to kill sth after screen off. Not sure of it
Also not sure of this auto-start PM Plus utility It is not only auto-start on system start but also start on events. Powerfull mess with many apps without granular controls.
However I use both ;p
edit. ok, it looks you're right about Doze. I.e. Huawei Doze problem. Here for Mate 8:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=64827731&postcount=15
Not solved as I see (but no time to read everything)
So Paul @paulobrien solution is with his ROM, your solution is to shut down Doze, I would prefer Doze properly working on (rooted) stock solution
adxuser said:
The solution was SSU cleanup, copying and installing SSU once again. If you check some threads here you will find some kinds of initial problems with SSU are quite common.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have the same problem on my tablet Huawei MediaPad T1 8.0 Pro.
Please explain exactly what supposed to mean is "SSU cleanup, copying and installing SSU once again".
If one makes SSU cleanup then root access will flee for good and installing SSU again encounter the stark barrier, right?
If of course by "cleanup" you mean SuperSU's SETTINGS -> CLEANUP -> Reinstall (?)
@ioy
Do you have EMUI 4.0 on your tablet?
Some tips & tricks work between some Huawei models but for sure not each on everyone...
Anyway I made (in SSU) cleanup for full unroot (if I remember correctly :/) and by "copying & installing" I mean H7 procedure to copy and install via TWRP.
So full unroot and full root once again and in my case it solved my problem.
@adxuser, and what is EMUI 4.0 and how to check if it is on the tablet?
Where to learn about these tip & tricks?
I do not have TWRP because I wanted to have warranty still intact so not unlocked bootloader, and that's why I have unrooted with KingRooot and afterwards switched to SuperSU with SuperSume.
Please, respond...
How to use cleanup options in SuperSu, there're several ones intended for switching to another su application - all of them work the way they need TWRP or maybe it is possible to switchin the system (booted)?
@ioy
what is EMUI 4.0 and how to check if it is on the tablet?
Where to learn about these tip & tricks?
I do not have TWRP because I wanted to have warranty still intact so not unlocked bootloader, and that's why I have unrooted with KingRooot and afterwards switched to SuperSU with SuperSume.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Emotion^^ User Interfece - Huawei visual & control overlay over Android.
For your http://www.gsmarena.com/huawei_mediapad_t1_8_0-6705.php 4.3 not upgradeble Android it is probably 2.0? (settings > about).
Tips & tricks those are some common to EMUI solutions - working on many Huawei models. They are nowhere together to be found, you have to search in all Huawei models if you are looking for sth. special. Anyway as you probably understand from JellyBean EMUI no.x to MM EMUI no.4.0 (or 4.1) that is a long way (some common things could even work however).
And also I am not a root specialist but if you have a locked bootloader SSU will never work so make a full cleanup and do not try again
Maybe this KingRoot will work but search for info on that.
ps. in most "normal" countries unlocked bootloader hasn't got anything to warranty.
Yes, KingRoot worked normally, prompt popup windows worked neatly.
However, Huawei itself warns if you unlock the bootloader then they will not help you anymore in case of trouble. And as you maybe know already, Huawei official assistance is needed in doing unlocking bootloader, it is done through their site and first this terrible warning is displayed... (presumably they register phone's IMEI, serial number and these data is then spread to warranty service outposts worldwide)
Yes, they can track and they probably track a lot more easily
Regarding warranty it may and it vary from continent/country to continent/country but local (e.g. european) regulations take effect on that matter.
So Huawei China can even track what I did with the phone yesterday at 6pm but when I am able to relock the phone (even with status relocked) and it could be seen that it is malfunctioning because of hardware failure then I am talking to Huawei in Europe and I am totally not interested what Huawei China has to say.
So sometimes there are some commom myths and you should check (in a proper way ) what are the possibilities.
And you have cited wrong model, this one is Huawei MediaPad T1 PRO LTE:
http://www.gsmchoice.com/en/catalogue/huawei/mediapadt18.0lte/Huawei-MediaPad-T1-8.0-LTE.html
It has 4.4.4 Android version, and Emotion UI version 2.3, so what are these tips & tricks for this?
Please try to provide any clue, about those tips& tricks in respect of popup windows, as as I can see usual popups for any application are not present in this Huawei model... Apparently something must block them in a regular manner...
ioy said:
And you have cited wrong model, this one is Huawei MediaPad T1 PRO LTE:
http://www.gsmchoice.com/en/catalogue/huawei/mediapadt18.0lte/Huawei-MediaPad-T1-8.0-LTE.html
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Quite possibly. Just a quick look.
As you probably understand we are on H7 subforum and I am not interested in other devices with its variants.
ioy said:
It has 4.4.4 Android version, and Emotion UI version 2.3, so what are these tips & tricks for this?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=66946525&postcount=12
Allright, how is it possible to switch off / disable this EMUI? What to freeze without bricking the phone? Presumably indeed this blocks popup windows itself and at all it seems providing no gain, plain Android is better and there are many apps on PlayStore with genius functions and full user's control, so please which system or internal memory apks are responsible for this EMUI and one normally can freeze them thus freeing the 'core' Android system from this dubious attraction?
Hi,
So i installed greenify on my samsung s8 that i unrooted because banking issues , could not log in so on. I installed greenify and did all the adb commands to improve the performance of the app. But my battery still sucks I it bad to begin with and i use powersaving mode all the time. Is there something i do wrong? Is it possible to extend batterylife by combindig power saving apps?
Thanks all!
(new to XDA so tell if you need more info )
Hi admins
Why android system takes 52% of my battery? Is this normal?
Device: Samsung A10s running android 10 2/32
Thank you.
It's NOT Android OS itself that consumes this amount of battery charge.
My guess is that Android OS only takes ~10%.
The programs / services which run on top of Android OS are using device's CPU what is draining device's battery.
To get an idea what is actually running on your phone you use ADB and run the following commands
Code:
adb devices
adb shell top
or install & run BetterBatteryStats APK that allows users to monitor how the battery is being used by the operating system and apps.
go to the battery options and enable "adaptive power saving"
some of it surely is samsungs bloatware
you can remove them without root using adb commands
search for the apps that are most consuming
also enable developer options, and limit the background process to 2
jwoegerbauer said:
It's NOT Android OS itself that consumes this amount of battery charge.
My guess is that Android OS only takes ~10%.
The programs / services which run on top of Android OS are using device's CPU what is draining device's battery.
To get an idea what is actually running on your phone you use ADB and run the following commands
Code:
adb devices
adb shell top
or install & run BetterBatteryStats APK that allows users to monitor how the battery is being used by the operating system and apps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How about adb codes to reduce battery drain or some diy tricks cuz i already ysed greenify and still the same, any helps will be appreciated thank you sir❤
ZodiacFam said:
How about adb codes to reduce battery drain or some diy tricks cuz i already ysed greenify and still the same, any helps will be appreciated thank you sir❤
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
greenify faitly useless...
battery drain also depends a lot on the device, some processors are more power hungry (even in idle) then others,
but some things help:
use 50% or less brightness, limit backgroud apps to 1 or 2 maximum, enable the adaptive battery mode
put all less frequent apps into sleep mode
debloat your device - and not only crap apps, use as little aps as you can
search for battery draining apps on your device that can be disabled or removed, for example the samsung "AASAservice"
and snapchat, tinder and other dating apps, any news app, facebook, streaming apps, microsoft apps etc. Use the website instead of the app whenever possible (this also fights telemetry)
widgets help draining battery, avoid using them as much as you can
disable bluetooth when you dont need it
and avoid getting your mobile phone hot - like leaving it on a cars dashboard, a place with direct sunlight, high temperature stresses the device, and drains more battery
cheers
Turn off all power management except screen/ power mode, set to optimize.
Android can manage it's self fine.
Clear Google Play Services clear its data as needed.
It can be disabled with a package blocker but is needed for gmail, Playstore; enable as needed.
Disable Google Backup Transport and Framework, clear their data as needed.
Disable all cloud stuff, carrier, Samsung, Google feedback.
Karma Firewall can be used to block the above system apks and reduce battery usage.
agonoize said:
some of it surely is samsungs bloatware
you can remove them without root using adb commands
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This statement is wrong: On non-rooted devices you by means of ADB can only hide apps to user, but not remove them, hence they still last on storage memory.
WhatsApp is half the problem...
jwoegerbauer said:
This statement is wrong: On non-rooted devices you by means of ADB can only hide apps to user, but not remove them, hence they still last on storage memory.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i currently have a samsung A01, and my mobile is not rooted, yet i removed all apps i do not want, including system apps, all google apps aside from playstore, i do not recall the exact numbers but i did get more space afterwards
if i try the command to enable them it fails telling me the app does not exist, if i look trough adb shell pm list packages the ones i 'uninstalled' are not listed, the apps are really gone
so maybe it depends on the brand and model? on some it can be done, on others not?
although i tought it could be done on all of them
agonoize said:
i currently have a samsung A01, and my mobile is not rooted, yet i removed all apps i do not want, including system apps, all google apps aside from playstore, i do not recall the exact numbers but i did get more space afterwards
if i try the command to enable them it fails telling me the app does not exist, if i look trough adb shell pm list packages the ones i 'uninstalled' are not listed, the apps are really gone
so maybe it depends on the brand and model? on some it can be done, on others not?
although i tought it could be done on all of them
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Code:
adb uninstall
internally runs
Code:
pm uninstall
So
Code:
adb uninstall --user 0 com.android.service
internally runs
Code:
pm uninstall --user 0 com.android.service
Bloatware housed in /system/priv-app obviously can get tracelessly removed, but surely not all that what is located in /system because essential apps in /system have FLAG_SYSTEM set. I'm pretty sure those apps can't get removed without root rights. But as always: I may err.
jwoegerbauer said:
Bloatware housed in /system/priv-app obviously can get tracelessly removed, but surely not all that what is located in /system because essential apps in /system have FLAG_SYSTEM set. I'm pretty sure those apps can't get removed without root rights. But as always: I may err.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
well now i am really curious about this, is there some adb command to check? or an app? to verify if they are really gone?
i know for sure the unbloated uses 0.3 less ram and about 2gb less storage space
thanks
jwoegerbauer said:
Bloatware housed in /system/priv-app obviously can get tracelessly removed, but surely not all that what is located in /system because essential apps in /system have FLAG_SYSTEM set. I'm pretty sure those apps can't get removed without root rights. But as always: I may err.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
well now i am really curious about this, is there some adb command to check? or an app? to verify if they are really gone?
i know for sure the unbloated uses 0.3 less ram and about 2gb less storage space
thanks
You use Android's package manager (pm) tool to perform actions and queries on app packages installed on the device.
Synthax:
Code:
adb shell "pm list packages [options] filter"
agonoize said:
well now i am really curious about this, is there some adb command to check? or an app? to verify if they are really gone?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nothing will go away really. Root access is needed if making changes into the system. They are just hiding from the current user.
agonoize said:
greenify faitly useless...
battery drain also depends a lot on the device, some processors are more power hungry (even in idle) then others,
but some things help:
use 50% or less brightness, limit backgroud apps to 1 or 2 maximum, enable the adaptive battery mode
put all less frequent apps into sleep mode
debloat your device - and not only crap apps, use as little aps as you can
search for battery draining apps on your device that can be disabled or removed, for example the samsung "AASAservice"
and snapchat, tinder and other dating apps, any news app, facebook, streaming apps, microsoft apps etc. Use the website instead of the app whenever possible (this also fights telemetry)
widgets help draining battery, avoid using them as much as you can
disable bluetooth when you dont need it
and avoid getting your mobile phone hot - like leaving it on a cars dashboard, a place with direct sunlight, high temperature stresses the device, and drains more battery
cheers
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh when you say "limit background apps to 1 or 2" what does it means and how would i do it?
ZodiacFam said:
Oh when you say "limit background apps to 1 or 2" what does it means and how would i do it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can do that in Developer Options. Or simple close apps out when done with them.
Some apps may refuse to do so and run in the background instead, connecting with the internet a few times a minute. Brave browser does this sometimes and force stopping it is the only thing that works. Swell.
blackhawk said:
Turn off all power management except screen/ power mode, set to optimize.
Android can manage it's self fine.
Clear Google Play Services clear its data as needed.
It can be disabled with a package blocker but is needed for gmail, Playstore; enable as needed.
Disable Google Backup Transport and Framework, clear their data as needed.
Disable all cloud stuff, carrier, Samsung, Google feedback.
Karma Firewall can be used to block the above system apks and reduce battery usage.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
By carrier you mean carrier services? What is its function?