Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
First off this linux, memory management is completely different. The processes that aren't in use and have been backed out of...return button instead of home...are in reality already "asleep". They take up a segment of your memory yes but with linux unlike windows there is little depreciation in performance, if any, when memory is in use and this is not what is causing much of the battery drain. The cpu being used is what causes the majority of battery drain. I do not use a task killer, but I do have systempanel just in case I need to control run away apps. I would refrain from using anything that automatically kills tasks unless your entirely know what you are doing and what you are killing. Many of the things that show up in your task killer will start back up after being killed automatically and all that you are doing is making the process active again which uses the cpu and drains battery.
I don't mean for this to be a discussion on using a task killer vs. not but if your goal is to mainly increase battery life try refraining from using a task killer, particularly one that auto kills, and see how your battery life differs. If there is no difference in battery usage this is healthier for your system because android itself allocates memory.
When I switched to android everyone said I needed a task killer. So I ran one for a while. Then I took it off and found the phone ran much better. Task killers are highly over rated.
, all-the-while google talks about how if they do anything for your phone it is typically not good. There are people on both sides of the issue where ever you go. But if people ran a linux distro they would get a better understanding of how the memory works in os's like android. I dual boot my computer with
windows
(only out of necessity) and ubuntu and unlike windows if I have 30 things open in ubuntu it runs just like it would if I had 2. Like I advised the original poster try it both ways and see how well it works for you, but memory that is not being used in android is wasted memory for all intents and purposes. Freeing memory will not boost performance. It's hard to get out of windows "kill all" mentality but don't we all just want a phone that just works...give it a chanceWhen I switched to android everyone said I needed a task killer. So I ran one for a while. Then I took it off and found the phone ran much better. Task killers are highly over rated.