Hello,
Just a simple question, but what is the normal ram usage?
Now its 65%, but sometimes, without running any programs, it uses 80%...
Related
is it possible to reduce the voltage that an apps or games are using?? it really annoys me when i see 700mA+ usage on battery monitor widget when i play a game or open an app... is that normal???
That IS normal. Games use the processor and the adreno quite hardly. And of course the LCD all of them can use 700+ mAs quite easyli.
Oh and by the way, mA is not voltage, it's current
If you use an app, it's wrinting the ROM and RAM, it uses current too, much more compared to the standby. Apps use them just for a short time (excluding GPS and apps that uses resources constantly) but the games uses them almost constantly...
Ken-Shi_Kun said:
That IS normal. Games use the processor and the adreno quite hardly. And of course the LCD all of them can use 700+ mAs quite easyli.
Oh and by the way, mA is not voltage, it's current
If you use an app, it's wrinting the ROM and RAM, it uses current too, much more compared to the standby. Apps use them just for a short time (excluding GPS and apps that uses resources constantly) but the games uses them almost constantly...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks for the reply... im just confuse because there are times that when i play games and check the battery monitor widget after, it only reads 1 or 10mA of usage and there times that its too high... i just thought that there can be a fix for the usage of the current and make it constant in every apps. or maybe something to reduce this to save some battery. but anyway you said its normal so i'll just ignore it thanks again!
In idle mode ( Standby ) the CPU indicator shows about 20% average.
But sometimes out of the blue, it can shoot up to 100%.
( Which means a large increase in battery energy consumtion )
Current: 2 mA idle - - 325 mA when CPU at max.
Obviously there are some background apps causing this.
I understand that all these task killers and memory RAM boosters
are of no use because Android OS has its own smart way to manage
the RAM and apps installed on the phone. And it overrides these
task killer and RAM management apps installed on the phone.
You kill a running app, and back again it restarts.
But the OS subsequently shuts down the apps when it
decides it is no longer needed to run in the background.
Sort of smart management.
However it could be interesting to know the average CPU usage
and current in mA on the LG P990 when in standby mode and max mode.
Note: Before I had V20B and the idle current was over 100 mA.
After upgrading to V20f at the LG center, the idle current dropped
to 2 mA.
As far as I know the g2x doesn't have exact mah reading capability ... just "estimated "
I would imagine your in the same boat
Pin it to Win it.
I disabled alot of bloatware and always close applications but i need a substantial ram usage and wanted to know if this was normal.
Phone isnt slow or anything, but i thought this looked like it was using more then i expected
check screen below
https://www.dropbox.com/s/f5tklwz262ln772/Screenshot_2014-04-24-21-54-53.png
genelise said:
I disabled alot of bloatware and always close applications but i need a substantial ram usage and wanted to know if this was normal.
Phone isnt slow or anything, but i thought this looked like it was using more then i expected
check screen below
https://www.dropbox.com/s/f5tklwz262ln772/Screenshot_2014-04-24-21-54-53.png
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is normal. Lower RAM usage means increased lag. Higher RAM usage means reduced lag. Disabling apps ("bloatware" or otherwise) has almost no impact on RAM usage.
When RAM usage is high, that means the OS is doing it's job and teeing up all the apps you are likely to run next. If those apps were not ready to go and waiting in RAM, they would need to be loaded into RAM first, which causes lag.
GeorgeP said:
That is normal. Lower RAM usage means increased lag. Higher RAM usage means reduced lag. Disabling apps ("bloatware" or otherwise) has almost no impact on RAM usage.
When RAM usage is high, that means the OS is doing it's job and teeing up all the apps you are likely to run next. If those apps were not ready to go and waiting in RAM, they would need to be loaded into RAM first, which causes lag.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks for the information. The phone is defiantly not slow and didnt think it was a major issue unless it affected performance.
s5 is great
Since the P20 does have 6 GB of memory the usage never seems to exceed ~51%.
Is there a threshold?
Also boost app, after intense use, sometimes crashes and restarts.
So I suspect the real memory usage to be restricted to save battery?
Achilles Etimone said:
Since the P20 does have 6 GB of memory the usage never seems to exceed ~51%.
Is there a threshold?
Also boost app, after intense use, sometimes crashes and restarts.
So I suspect the real memory usage to be restricted to save battery?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
RAM uses power whether it stores a 1 or a 0 so it's always active. Ram usage won't affect battery life. The os just manages the ram to keep sufficient available for running foreground apps etc and closes or minimises background ones as needed. I've seen mine go as low as 2gb available.
Sent from my CLT-L09 using Tapatalk
Hello guys,
I would like to ask you, what is your average ram usage? because the lowest I could go for is 5GB after using memory guardian to close all apps and average usage is 6-6.5 GB. Highest is 7.4 GB
I find the average so high, because I was using same apps on my previous A70 phone and only 4-5 gb was used.
Is that normal?
Are you guys using any third-party app to clean your ram automatically?
A70 has only 6GB of RAM. You were using 80-90% of it (4-5GB).
S21U has 12/16 GB of RAM and you're using 50-60% of it (6-8 GB), even for the "lower" RAM variant.
That's very good brother. If the remaining 4 GB RAM is lying unused, or if you had more, like 8 GB free, how would that benefit your user experience? One of the reasons to buy flagships like this is the large RAM. But that would be pointless if it were never even used, right?
Apps kept in RAM can be woken up and ready to instantly with less energy expenditure. Those that get unloaded from the RAM, are also eventually loaded back - but that is from the internal UFS 3.1 storage, which is slower than LPDDR5 RAM, and wastes much more energy (battery) for a full app start instead of resuming from suspended state in RAM.
I stopped using RAM clearing apps or even OEM cleaning services few years ago. Android manages RAM very well on the newer versions, and I haven't seen any advantage of clearing apps or RAM as an end user. It only helps if you have a rogue app that runs in the background constantly. Usually, the battery health monotoring built in Android will alert yourlself to it and you can choose to put it to deep sleep or disable or uninstall the offending app. But short of bad apps, most other services don't need manual motitoring and constant user maintenance.
When free RAM falls below what the phone needs, it will kill the last/least pioritised task and re-claim it for use. As a user, you shouldn't have to bother with managing it manually.
Yup, as @enigmaamit said, don't worry and stop bothering with ram cleaning apps. I also used to try and clean my RAM back in the day but that was only necessary on the 2GB and maybe 4GB RAM phones. Since the 6GB RAM phones, cleaning apps have been useless.
The reason your a70 was using less is because it had less and the system had to decide how much to fill and how much to leave free to maximize performance.
Carry on and worry not.
On android, free ram is wasted ram. Remember this and stop using useless "memory cleaning" apps. All they do is slow your phone down and kill your battery life. Same with clearing app cache. Only do it if you have a problem with the respective app.