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.
whats the difference between android system and android os as android os is using alot mre percentage than adroid os
when i go into
settings,
then about phone
then battery
then battery use
i get a list
display
android os
voice calls
cell standby
phone idle
android system
whats the difference between android system and android os as android os is using alot mre percentage than adroid os
Click the link in this quote ^^, the little arrow beside my name
Euhm task killers usually don't have anything to do with extending the battery life. Closing apps might even decrease the battery life... so please don't give any wrong information!
First of all I didn't call you a liar!!!
Second of all this topic has been discussed plenty of times by android devs. Here is one example : AndroidSPIN Why you don’t need a task killer app with Android.
I might not be an "electrical engineer" but I've been a software developer for almost 10 years now. (Although not for smartphones, but I do have some knowledge about it)
If certain apps are draining your battery (when they're open in the background) it's either because they're a bit dodgy (like sending information when they shouldn't) or it's just shitty programming. So the use of the RAM is totally different here then it is on regular pc's so you can't compare those at all.
Sorry if I offended you, I didn't intended to.
cheers
Atk gives way better battery life IMO. I hate seeing a heap of processes running that don't need to be even after a reboot. Got a feeling development don't like it is because ads could be loaded with the processes without Aitken.
ATKs are mainly used for conserving battery life, so ignore all this raucous about memory management. God, this article is so typical of programmers getting caught up in the tech and not looking at it from the user's perspective.
You know what Google should consider? Forcing devs to implement a "would you like to keep this application running?" prompt when they back out. Google needs to show a little more responsibility with quality control, instead of just creating an OS and letting devs run hogwild.
Lets see..... Task Manager (only the one from Rhythm Software really works, ignore the others) seems to be increasing my battery life on NORMAL usage. Used to get like 15 hours (thats with wifi off 75% of the time, no 3g/4g on for testing purposes) to having wifi on all the time, and now I'm getting at least 24 hours of battery life..... 9 hour increase? seems to me like the task manager IS increasing battery life.
I know I've read the comments But in the end they're just user opinions (just like my opinion is different) and not the devs.
All i can say is that I don't use an ATK and only use software from trustworthy devs and my battery seems to work longer then most people here claim... I get about 40hrs out of 1 charge and I'm a moderate user. I do turn off all my network connections when I don't need them though.
I guess in the end people just need to try and see what works best for them...
Cheers
The task-killer app I refer to is used by many, and is recommended many places.
Unfortunately many people don't understand how Android works. This ad populi argument is made time and time again. It means nothing that many people use it. They are wrong.
Your car analogy is a false one rendering your argument fallacious.
Full RAM in Android is a good thing. Apps stored in RAM do not use CPU cycles and do not drain the battery. Only running apps use the battery.
Task Killers will show apps stored in RAM that are not using your battery life. Force closing apps with a Task Killer results in Android automatically opening some of them again - resulting in battery drain.
The constant force-closing of apps not only sucks battery life but it also compromises the smooth running of Android OS.
Task Killers are totally redundant on devices running 2.1 or higher.
Let Android do what it was meant to do.
Task Killers will show apps stored in RAM that are not using your battery life.
Click the litte arrow by my name ^^
Sorry but I've been thinking about this all day and I couldn't let it go... Since you're studying electrical engineering could you tell me how much difference there is in power consumption for a total empty ram and a total full ram (I am talking about android-smartphones here, not pc's!) Because I've been doing a lot of research and pretty much all the sites say there is no difference or an insignificant difference.
Here is another good thread that discusses the need for (or not needing of) Task Managers.
Cheers
I know how ram works, but there is a big difference in architecture between regular pc's and smartphones... and since you keep preaching that full ram uses so much more power I want you to back up your theorie with some numbers since a lot of people say it doesn't use more or insignificantly more power.
I did some calculating... 20watts for the ram running at about 1.8V (that's the average for pc's you can look that up, so probably even less for smartphones) That means you're saying it uses more than 10Amps (watts/Volts)... Although the battery of the DHD is only 1230mAh which means it could only run 1.23Amps for an hour. How do you explain this??
Look. I said, it was a specific question, and I don't know the details. I tried looking up how much one latch uses, but couldn't seem to find that information currently. So I said a number that was plausible. But I guess for smaller things (like laptops and smartphones) it is much smaller when I think about it.
But that is not the point, the point is that RAM does pull power, and as I said, with such a small battery as the DHD, just small amount of power drainage constantly, does take quite a bit of power from the battery overall. Thus having many apps running on Android does take battery, either you are willing to accept this or not. I'm not gonna discuss this any further, because unless the Technical University of Denmark is wrongly informing their students, I know that RAM pulls power constantly, thus by not shutting programs off they will use power, no matter if the program is "inactive" in the CPU or not
PS! You also said you shut off communications when you don't use them. I have communcations on all the time, and I still get 10 hours more. And it's a known fact that the data communications of the phone take up most battery. Thus, end of discussion Thank you for your time
Hi first of all, I just registered to reply to you!
First of all, why do you mention always that you are an engineer student? That means actually nothing....!!!
I am actually an engineer (ECU programmer/ Dipl. Ing. and not only a student...)and yes I do know as well how a RAM works but I am not an mobile-phone specialist. However, see it from the point that the 'flag' setting/holding needs less power as to open and to use a task killer!
"CPU power overshadows RAM by
a factor of two or more. Audio displayed a largely static
power consumption in the range of 28–34 mW. Overall,
RAM, audio and SD have little effect on the power consumption of the device, and therefore offer little potential
for energy optimisation."
(http://www.usenix.org/events/usenix10/tech/full_papers/Carroll.pdf)
Ergo the usage of a task killer seems to be not adequate.
Thus you are wrong and the conversation is closed!!!
(sorry for this but I think that this is not an adequate way to speak to other persons, this is a forum and respect should be always in first place and I wanted only to show you how it is...)
However, under the SPEC
CPU suites, they show that RAM power can indeed exceed CPU power for highly memory-bound workloads.
Ok, sorry I guess I misunderstood your tone.
However I have no idea why a task killer should add anything to your battery life and I am be honest you are the first person who claims to get increased battery life from a task killer (I am talking here about the well known one, i.e. xda, android-hilfe or android central).
Best Wishes and a nice weekend,
Tiago
Look. I said, it was a specific question, and I don't know the details. I tried looking up how much one latch uses, but couldn't seem to find that information currently. So I said a number that was plausible.