Hi Friends,
Everyone use android today and android is open source so it can be hang so
today i m going to tall you how to make ur phone faster.
Things to do is here below.
1. Delete All Application That You Dont use.
Everyone use android today and android is open source so it can be hang so
today i m going to tall you how to make ur phone faster.
Things to do is here below.
1. Delete All Application That You Dont use.
You know the ones I mean. We all download apps on a whim, try them a
time or two,
then forget they are even there. They sit in the app drawer, counting their days and plotting
ways to make your phone slow by using resources like CPU cycles for background services,
taking up memory blocks and fragmenting your storage, and generally cluttering the place up.
It's not you, dog whistle simulator app, it's us. Things just aren't going to work and
we have to say goodbye. We're still the best of friends, right? To delete any
app you've downloaded, you can head into the device settings to find the App "manager."
The people who made your phone might have buried it inside another section (hello there, Samsung!)
but poke around or ask somebody and you'll find it.
Once open, pick the tab that says "DOWNLOADED" and scroll through the list.
When you find an app that needs to go away, tap the list entry to open the application's info screen.
At the top you'll see a button to Uninstall it. Tap. Boom. Bam. Goodbye unwanted application.
Be vicious here. You can always download an app again if you decide you needed
it after all — and that includes apps you paid for — but getting rid of the stragglers and
hanger-on apps can make a big difference in how your phone runs the apps you do want.
take up quite a lot of space and there will potentially be cached data in there for apps that you
no longer use. Sometimes clearing cached data for an app can also help clear up flaky behavior.
If you want to pick individual apps then head into Settings > Apps and slide over the
All tab and tap on the relevant app then choose Clear cache. If you’ve decided to just clear the
whole lot then go to Settings > Storage and tap on Cached data and then tap OK. Also,
check out CCleaner, it cleans out your app cache and helps perform this kind of maintenance.
automatically sync in the background to pull in new data and provide us with updates.
All this syncing has a big impact on performance, not to mention battery life.
You could go to Settings and find Auto-sync under Accounts and just turn it off altogether,
but that will be too drastic for most people. Instead why not just reduce the sync frequency
and remove any accounts you don’t really need? For a lot of apps, like Facebook,
you’ll need to open up the app and find the settings to reduce the sync frequency.
It’s worth cleaning this out every once in a while. You’ll have to boot into recovery mode to do it
The method of entering recovery mode varies depending on your device, but you’ll find it
easily with a quick Google search. Once in recovery mode you use the volume keys to
navigate and the power key to select an item. You’ll want to choose wipe cache partition.
then forget they are even there. They sit in the app drawer, counting their days and plotting
ways to make your phone slow by using resources like CPU cycles for background services,
taking up memory blocks and fragmenting your storage, and generally cluttering the place up.
It's not you, dog whistle simulator app, it's us. Things just aren't going to work and
we have to say goodbye. We're still the best of friends, right? To delete any
app you've downloaded, you can head into the device settings to find the App "manager."
The people who made your phone might have buried it inside another section (hello there, Samsung!)
but poke around or ask somebody and you'll find it.
Once open, pick the tab that says "DOWNLOADED" and scroll through the list.
When you find an app that needs to go away, tap the list entry to open the application's info screen.
At the top you'll see a button to Uninstall it. Tap. Boom. Bam. Goodbye unwanted application.
Be vicious here. You can always download an app again if you decide you needed
it after all — and that includes apps you paid for — but getting rid of the stragglers and
hanger-on apps can make a big difference in how your phone runs the apps you do want.
2. Clear cached app data
Cached data for apps should help them to load more quickly, but it can build up over time totake up quite a lot of space and there will potentially be cached data in there for apps that you
no longer use. Sometimes clearing cached data for an app can also help clear up flaky behavior.
If you want to pick individual apps then head into Settings > Apps and slide over the
All tab and tap on the relevant app then choose Clear cache. If you’ve decided to just clear the
whole lot then go to Settings > Storage and tap on Cached data and then tap OK. Also,
check out CCleaner, it cleans out your app cache and helps perform this kind of maintenance.
3.Turn off or reduce auto-sync
Most of us end up adding a list of different accounts to our Android devices and we allow them to
automatically sync in the background to pull in new data and provide us with updates.
All this syncing has a big impact on performance, not to mention battery life.
You could go to Settings and find Auto-sync under Accounts and just turn it off altogether,
but that will be too drastic for most people. Instead why not just reduce the sync frequency
and remove any accounts you don’t really need? For a lot of apps, like Facebook,
you’ll need to open up the app and find the settings to reduce the sync frequency.
4.Wipe cache partition
The cache partition is separate from your app data cache and it contains temporary files.It’s worth cleaning this out every once in a while. You’ll have to boot into recovery mode to do it
The method of entering recovery mode varies depending on your device, but you’ll find it
easily with a quick Google search. Once in recovery mode you use the volume keys to
navigate and the power key to select an item. You’ll want to choose wipe cache partition.
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