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I don't know if this is normal or not so I'm posting my findings for you. Here's the situation: whenever I am playing something with windows media player the memory usage jumps from 32MB to 90MB!!! I have not seen this on my previous wizard and I am thinking it is some kind of memory leak. It's really problematic as I can't open any more apps simultaneously because I get the out of memory error. Sure could use a fix if there is one. Thanks.
I will use it for episodes and mp3s. I will only be dumping limited amount of tunes since i wont be using it as an mp3 player much.
What do you guys have in your kaiser?
On my 6GB card I normally have:
1G TomTom maps (East & West Europe)
3 x full length movies
2500 mp3's
20MB cab files (ready for after a new rom flash)
100+ MB for files and photos.
what i do with 8gig
I have been using a tool called mojopac (http://www.mojopac.com ) it is a portable desktop environment. You run it, and install your apps on "c:" which is the phone, then just plug your phone into any pc (even mac with parallels) and you are on your isolated desktop. It supports a large variety of apps (like microsoft office, adobe production suite CS3 etc) all native inside the virtual desktop. It is not a VM so it is very fast to load and run.
It is so powerful, that i no longer carry a laptop to and from work. Just my phone. Used it for years, 8 gig is enough, 12 is perfect.
They have a FREE version (worth the $$ for the pro). It will be vista capable in the next month or so.
Only trick is you need to turn your device into a usb storage device. Get wm5storage (free, some problems see this site for details http://www.pocketpcfreeware.com/en/index.php?soft=1543) or cardexport II(not free but works on install http://www.softick.com) to bypass activesync issue.
1G TomTom maps (East & West Europe)
5 x full length movies
2500 mp3's
100 Albums.
bpianfet said:
I have been using a tool called mojopac (http://www.mojopac.com ) it is a portable desktop environment. You run it, and install your apps on "c:" which is the phone, then just plug your phone into any pc (even mac with parallels) and you are on your isolated desktop. It supports a large variety of apps (like microsoft office, adobe production suite CS3 etc) all native inside the virtual desktop. It is not a VM so it is very fast to load and run.
It is so powerful, that i no longer carry a laptop to and from work. Just my phone. Used it for years, 8 gig is enough, 12 is perfect.
They have a FREE version (worth the $$ for the pro). It will be vista capable in the next month or so.
Only trick is you need to turn your device into a usb storage device. Get wm5storage (free, some problems see this site for details http://www.pocketpcfreeware.com/en/index.php?soft=1543) or cardexport II(not free but works on install http://www.softick.com) to bypass activesync issue.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is great stuff! Didnt know it was out there...!! thanks for sharing
I still have about 3.2GB free on my 6.0GB card. Here's what I have so far:
- Tomtom w/US map
- about 400 mp3s
- 2 movies
- about 25 or so music videos
- about 200 family pictures
- a dictionary
- a thesaurus
- CIA World Factbook
- tons of games and misc apps
- misc documents
Two words: Mobile Porn!
J/k: lots of apps, all my cab files I've ever used, and my current favorite music playlists...
bpianfet said:
I have been using a tool called mojopac (http://www.mojopac.com ) it is a portable desktop environment. You run it, and install your apps on "c:" which is the phone, then just plug your phone into any pc (even mac with parallels) and you are on your isolated desktop. It supports a large variety of apps (like microsoft office, adobe production suite CS3 etc) all native inside the virtual desktop. It is not a VM so it is very fast to load and run.
It is so powerful, that i no longer carry a laptop to and from work. Just my phone. Used it for years, 8 gig is enough, 12 is perfect.
They have a FREE version (worth the $$ for the pro). It will be vista capable in the next month or so.
Only trick is you need to turn your device into a usb storage device. Get wm5storage (free, some problems see this site for details http://www.pocketpcfreeware.com/en/index.php?soft=1543) or cardexport II(not free but works on install http://www.softick.com) to bypass activesync issue.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Absolutley great free package! Works best with Softick Card Export (good UI) and you have to do a workaround with WM5torage as it is not fully working on the 'Kaiser'.
Cheers!
Wow 2500 MP3s? What bit rate are you using?
Mount it under Linux and then run this command:
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/bigspacewaster bs=4096k count=1500000
jgermuga said:
Wow 2500 MP3s? What bit rate are you using?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Haha...I did not even notice that. Let's calculate this:
He's got:
1G TomTom maps (East & West Europe)
5 x full length movies
2500 mp3's
100 Albums.
1,000MB on Tomtom - Remaining 5GB
5 full-length movies - probably around 200MB each - Remaining 4GB
100 Albums - probably around 200MB total - Remaining 3800MB
3800MB/2500 mp3s = 1.52MB per mp3
Dang...that's like a 32kbps!
Haha...I sure hope not!
On my 6 gig I have:
1.5G of Tom Tom Maps (North America and NY/NJ/CT...etc., etc.)
1.3G of iGuidance maps
640M of youtube vids, tv shows, movies
400M of iGo maps
364M of pictures (3,553 photos)
500M of backups and CAB files
150M of installed programs (about 40 programs at any times; adding some to try out, deleting others)
jgermuga said:
Wow 2500 MP3s? What bit rate are you using?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I was about to say...2500 mp3s? ringtones maybe?
I don't know if it's already been posted or not.
You know that our SD cards (internal and/or external) is FAT32 formatted, so the FileSystem size limit is 4Gb.
This means that if you want to copy on your phone one file .Mkv bigger than 4Gb you can't
Some users have tried to split the Mkvs in several files less than 4Gb using tools like MkvMerge, but the Phone doesn't recognize the files outputted.
But if you split the file on a Linux OS (Ubuntu i.e.) the files generated works perfectly on the phone.
I have tested it on Ubuntu using MKVMerge, starting from a 4,8 Gb Mkv file splitted in 3 files (2Gb-2Gb-800Mb), files copied on the phone and played perfectly with the default Video Player.
There's a much easier way as well, though I've only tried this once:
If you connect the phone in Kies mode (in the usb settings) and it connects properly you will get a "GT-I9000" Device show up in my computer instead of the standard lettered drive under "Devices with removable storage". It seems that you need to have Kies running in the background (with the icon in your system tray) but not fully open for this to work (not entirely sure on this as Kies is finicky). When you double click on the GT-I900 device in my computer you will get options for the internal or external sd card (assuming you have one installed).
If you copy and paste a file onto either of the sd cards using this method, it uses the Kies background service to check the file. If it detects a media file that might not be supported it will give you a warning which you can choose to ignore and copy the file anyways. I've found that if you copy a larger than 4gb mkv it uses the Kies service to split the file and put it on the sd card automatically. This takes a while as it has to split/convert the file and then write a fair amount of data to the sd card over usb.
You may be confused when it finishes as it only shows 1 file, it is smart enough to hid the others. The size of the file seems to be the amount that the original one was over 4gb (ex a 4.7gb movie will show as 700mb), however if you check the space avail on the sd card you will see that it contains the full movie. I transfered a 4.7gb 720p rip of "Tropic Thunder" this way to my phone and it played just fine on the samsung video player.
Let me know if that works out for you, I havn't seen anyone else try this.
how about formatting the SD card as Linux EXT3 or 4
the use smb mount, so when it does the mass storage mount to windows you can simply drag and drop, without having to cut any video into 4 GB chunks due the FAT32 limitation?
Nirvana388 said:
There's a much easier way as well, though I've only tried this once:
If you connect the phone in Kies mode (in the usb settings) and it connects properly you will get a "GT-I9000" Device show up in my computer instead of the standard lettered drive under "Devices with removable storage". It seems that you need to have Kies running in the background (with the icon in your system tray) but not fully open for this to work (not entirely sure on this as Kies is finicky). When you double click on the GT-I900 device in my computer you will get options for the internal or external sd card (assuming you have one installed).
If you copy and paste a file onto either of the sd cards using this method, it uses the Kies background service to check the file. If it detects a media file that might not be supported it will give you a warning which you can choose to ignore and copy the file anyways. I've found that if you copy a larger than 4gb mkv it uses the Kies service to split the file and put it on the sd card automatically. This takes a while as it has to split/convert the file and then write a fair amount of data to the sd card over usb.
You may be confused when it finishes as it only shows 1 file, it is smart enough to hid the others. The size of the file seems to be the amount that the original one was over 4gb (ex a 4.7gb movie will show as 700mb), however if you check the space avail on the sd card you will see that it contains the full movie. I transfered a 4.7gb 720p rip of "Tropic Thunder" this way to my phone and it played just fine on the samsung video player.
Let me know if that works out for you, I havn't seen anyone else try this.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wow if this is true it is some pretty slick thinking ahead by Samsung both on the phone and PC side.. I think I will try this just for kicks, have a 6 GB MKV right here.
EDIT: Could not wait any longer... thing was maxing my CPU for 1/2 hour. I am pretty sure this is doing some kind of trans-coding.
AllGamer said:
how about formatting the SD card as Linux EXT3 or 4
the use smb mount, so when it does the mass storage mount to windows you can simply drag and drop, without having to cut any video into 4 GB chunks due the FAT32 limitation?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is exactly the test i would like to do, do you have already tested this way?
But, atm, i haven't any SD card to use and (most important) i would like to know if after having formatted in i.e. ext4 i will be able to re-format in Fat32.
And however, do i need a particular Memory Card Reader to read one ext? SD formatted card?
Nirvana388 said:
There's a much easier way as well, though I've only tried this once:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good trick!
I will try it asap to give you a Roger on that!
brunes said:
Wow if this is true it is some pretty slick thinking ahead by Samsung both on the phone and PC side.. I think I will try this just for kicks, have a 6 GB MKV right here.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yea just make sure that it's 720p and not too high of a quality level.. I know it doesn't do quite all MKVs as the format is not yet entirely standardized. It seems to handle 4~5gb 720p mkvs just fine though, they just take FOREVER to transfer.
AllGamer said:
how about formatting the SD card as Linux EXT3 or 4
the use smb mount, so when it does the mass storage mount to windows you can simply drag and drop, without having to cut any video into 4 GB chunks due the FAT32 limitation?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't know that the phone would accept a file system other than fat32? Would be easy to find out though.
i have some videos that are larger than 4G
i'll definitely give it a shot to test the Linux partition theory.
I'm almost positive it'll work, as the "Lag Fixes" solution all uses the EXT3 and EXT4 partitions anyway.
but in our case we want to use it natively for video playback, and be able to mount it when we want to use it with Windows
re: question about formatting back to FAT32 after EXT3
Yes, it's possible and safe to do so.
As soon as i have more time in my hands, i'll give this a go, unless some one beats me to it (some one with more time on their hand)
brunes said:
Wow if this is true it is some pretty slick thinking ahead by Samsung both on the phone and PC side.. I think I will try this just for kicks, have a 6 GB MKV right here.
EDIT: Could not wait any longer... thing was maxing my CPU for 1/2 hour. I am pretty sure this is doing some kind of trans-coding.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Haha yea it's software encoding, I think having Samsung encode it so it could run on your GPU would be a bit too much to ask lol. A 4.5gb movie took my quad core about 25 minutes to encode and then transfer.
AllGamer said:
i have some videos that are larger than 4G
i'll definitely give it a shot to test the Linux partition theory.
I'm almost positive it'll work, as the "Lag Fixes" solution all uses the EXT3 and EXT4 partitions anyway.
but in our case we want to use it natively for video playback, and be able to mount it when we want to use it with Windows
re: question about formatting back to FAT32 after EXT3
Yes, it's possible and safe to do so.
As soon as i have more time in my hands, i'll give this a go, unless some one beats me to it (some one with more time on their hand)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Looking forward to your experiment!
AllGamer said:
i have some videos that are larger than 4G
i'll definitely give it a shot to test the Linux partition theory.
I'm almost positive it'll work, as the "Lag Fixes" solution all uses the EXT3 and EXT4 partitions anyway.
but in our case we want to use it natively for video playback, and be able to mount it when we want to use it with Windows
re: question about formatting back to FAT32 after EXT3
Yes, it's possible and safe to do so.
As soon as i have more time in my hands, i'll give this a go, unless some one beats me to it (some one with more time on their hand)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Have you tried this yet? I've googled all over. Cant find solution how to format and use external SD like this. Found this thread and posted in it as well http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=975803
u can download mkv smaller than 4gb..and graphic will be still great =)
Its not just movies I want to be able to place on sd card. I can't split those files. And I don't want to convert existing mkv files to a lower resolution, spend time on that.... its not a quick process to compress the resolution. I much rather be able to copy what i have now to my phone, instead of having to modify. ...
Sent from my SGH-T959D using XDA App
http://www.bunkus.org/videotools/mkvtoolnix/
I use http://www.bunkus.org/videotools/mkvtoolnix/
You can set the file size and even remove unwanted subs and/or audios.
I have mkvtoolnix and have used it. Thats not the question, but thank you
Anyone knows?
not losing hope. It will be useful for others, I am sure.
compressing the file would help
as in making DVD sources with less channel or less quality can drastically reduce the file size without too much sacrify to HD quality
say for example choose 720 instead of 1080
2 channels instead of 6 channels
or even if you keep it 6 channels make it 160 instead 320, or maybe drop it lower to even 128 kbps
use 44 instead of 48
use 25 fps instead of 30fps
etc...
bmvik said:
Its not just movies I want to be able to place on sd card. I can't split those files. And I don't want to convert existing mkv files to a lower resolution, spend time on that.... its not a quick process to compress the resolution. I much rather be able to copy what i have now to my phone, instead of having to modify. ...
Sent from my SGH-T959D using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
so there is no way? We're just stuck having to use a workaround?
That size of file requires card to be formatted as exfat .
Try it see if phone reads exfat .
jje
Deleted! Wrong place
I have just ordered my RaspberryPi, and I plan on using it for below.
1. Connect my powered 2TB external HDD to it and make a NAS
2. Use it as a torrent client
3. Play movies on the HDD using XBMC
4. Run lightppd to share my files on the internet.
Coming to my questions
1. Would it be possible to install the distro on a separate partition one the HDD? I plan to format the HDD using ext4.
2. Will the little machine be able to handle the load of all 4 tasks?
3. Should I use NFS over SMB? I plan to access the files of the share on Linux, Windows and Android.
Please let me know your thoughts on this.
Tapatalked from Desire S running Andromadus
suku_patel_22 said:
I have just ordered my RaspberryPi, and I plan on using it for below.
1. Connect my powered 2TB external HDD to it and make a NAS
2. Use it as a torrent client
3. Play movies on the HDD using XBMC
4. Run lightppd to share my files on the internet.
Coming to my questions
1. Would it be possible to install the distro on a separate partition one the HDD? I plan to format the HDD using ext4.
2. Will the little machine be able to handle the load of all 4 tasks?
3. Should I use NFS over SMB? I plan to access the files of the share on Linux, Windows and Android.
Please let me know your thoughts on this.
Tapatalked from Desire S running Andromadus
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1: I would use a bootloader like BerryBoot to install the distro on the hard drive, I think its possible, Ive only installed on a flash drive and SD Card, but I dont see why it wouldnt work.
2. It might be able to handle it but cant say for sure. On mine I am using XBMC and streaming movies from my desktop and I am using nearly 400mb of RAM but I think the CPU load is okay.
3. Not sure on this one, I use SMB but my laptop is broken so I dont have linux running on any of my machines, but Windows and Android works just fine, and I actually use my Nexus 7 as a remote for XBMC.
ZachOlauson said:
1: I would use a bootloader like BerryBoot to install the distro on the hard drive, I think its possible, Ive only installed on a flash drive and SD Card, but I dont see why it wouldnt work.
2. It might be able to handle it but cant say for sure. On mine I am using XBMC and streaming movies from my desktop and I am using nearly 400mb of RAM but I think the CPU load is okay.
3. Not sure on this one, I use SMB but my laptop is broken so I dont have linux running on any of my machines, but Windows and Android works just fine, and I actually use my Nexus 7 as a remote for XBMC.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
SMB is compatible with linux and Windows natively, however if you intend to stream HD video at all NFS would be better. My NAS uses both, NFS to stream to my pi running xbmc, and samba for windows machines/android devices. I also running a upnp server for remote streaming to my phone.
Sent from my DROID3 using xda premium
Samba has slow speeds on the pi typically 7-8Mbps compared to the usual 25-40 i get from my drive.
ratchetnclank said:
Samba has slow speeds on the pi typically 7-8Mbps compared to the usual 25-40 i get from my drive.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I found samba had lag on HD vids. I still use samba on my windows and android devices, buti never stream HD to them
Sent from my DROID3 using xda premium
The Pi's 'ROM/BIOS' boot code attempts to bootstrap from the SD. If there is nothing where it expects it to be it won't start.
You would need some code to transfer startup to the external hard disk.
AFAIK, the raspberry pi can boot partitions from an external USB drive, what it actually boots is the GPU executable which loads a kernel, then it can bootstrap an USB HDD.
For the SMB or NFS matter, NFS usually provides higher throughput than SMB, and Windows can mount NFS based hosts, I'd go for that if you plan to see some performance.
As said, NFS have smaller overhead than SMB. So use that if you can.
Sent from my Nexus 4 using xda premium
i have a Samba server and i can Stream Full HD whit no problems (maybe a littel slow in the Begining nothing more) 1TB 2.0USB HDD NTFS
So overall NFS is better than Samba?
Yes, but samba is easier to setup across platforms
Tapatalked from Desire S running Andromadus
I have just a 256 MB model, and I'll use it for torrent+file share+XBMC. Which client for torrenting will you use otherwise? (transmission-daemon or rTorrent?)
Not sure, whichever gives me ability to push torrents from my pc.
My pi arrives next week.
Tapatalked from Desire S running Andromadus
You should give transmission-daemon and transmission gui (transgui) a try. You can push files via the Internet if you have your port forwarding set up correctly.
I have a slightly different setup that has Apache providing ssl for transmission-daemon
EDIT
You can also set it up with transdroid on Android. I believe transdroid also works with r Torrent.
NFS is faster than SMB. If you are reasonably Linux-savvy, you should have no issues setting it up. I serve NFS to my Win 7 torrent box from OpenIndiana. Setting up Win7 as an NFS client is a bit more complicated.
=RV=
Endoroid said:
I found samba had lag on HD vids. I still use samba on my windows and android devices, buti never stream HD to them
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I hope you're talking about megabits per second. You can get 7~8 Megabytes per second with SAMBA and you can get the full 12 megabytes (100megabits) per second with NFS, but never more than that.
In most cases, samba is enough, but I've seen two or three videos with imense video and sound quality that SAMBA simply can't keep up. NFS saves the day. The 100 megabit ethernet can be a real bottleneck though.
redvelociraptor said:
NFS is faster than SMB. If you are reasonably Linux-savvy, you should have no issues setting it up. I serve NFS to my Win 7 torrent box from OpenIndiana. Setting up Win7 as an NFS client is a bit more complicated.
=RV=
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Setting up the NFS is really quite a bit of trouble for a first-timer. Windows doesn't play well you don't have the no_root_squash option on the server. After that though, all l you need is a bat script with "mount <NFS_SERVER_IP>://<SHARE>/<FOLDER> <DRIVE>:". Don't forget to enable NFS client first.
Either that or use nekodrive and dokan.
sioxz said:
i have a Samba server and i can Stream Full HD whit no problems (maybe a littel slow in the Begining nothing more) 1TB 2.0USB HDD NTFS
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yeah same here samba runs very smooth for my 3D/1080p movie streams.
I recommend changing up the settings(disable firewall etc) increase buffer size and overclock.
i prefer nfs for hd movies, there is also a windows nfs client :laugh:
As I read I must give a try for NFS.
There were bechmarktests done by a user in the OpenELEC forum.
As you can see the difference isn't that great:
FTP was faster than SMB by 1.57%
NFS was faster than FTP by 5.65%
And finally NFS was faster than SMB by 7.22%
Hi there,
I have a rooted 2019 F7 (Mustang) - stock rom - to be honest it's not a great performer but the form factor is spot on. I need a fix or workaround for playing music + browsing at the same time.
I'm struggling to get the F7 to do simple multi tasking for example, playing music via Spotify, or a Radio app whle browsing the web.
I've tried the usual "tricks" to keep Android memory manager at bay, and stop it closing my music in the background e.g:
- a 4gb swap partition in /data/ via apps2sd;
- using termux to create a swap file, both in /data/ and /cache/;
- Using Swapper (root) to create a swap file; and
- various swappiness settings using teh above.
Swap seems to work superficially, as the partitions are shown as free memory whenI run
Code:
free -m
in terminal, however, the amount of memory used suggests the system is not utilising them beyond a few MB over ZRAM.
In any event - is there some clever workaround I can use to either keep my apps music alive / listen adn browse in the same browser etc?
thephatmaster said:
Hi there,
I have a rooted 2019 F7 (Mustang) - stock rom - to be honest it's not a great performer but the form factor is spot on. I need a fix or workaround for playing music + browsing at the same time.
I'm struggling to get the F7 to do simple multi tasking for example, playing music via Spotify, or a Radio app whle browsing the web.
I've tried the usual "tricks" to keep Android memory manager at bay, and stop it closing my music in the background e.g:
- a 4gb swap partition in /data/ via apps2sd;
- using termux to create a swap file, both in /data/ and /cache/;
- Using Swapper (root) to create a swap file; and
- various swappiness settings using teh above.
Swap seems to work superficially, as the partitions are shown as free memory whenI run in terminal, however, the amount of memory used suggests the system is not utilising them beyond a few MB over ZRAM.
In any event - is there some clever workaround I can use to either keep my apps music alive / listen adn browse in the same browser etc?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Best solution IME is a 192MB (or so) swap file in the /cache partition with priorities set to favor the exiting 64MB ZRAM based swap. Set swappiness to ~10 and call it a day. Spinning up a huge static swap partition in /data won't help (will likely have the opposite effect) as the low-end eMMC overtaxes the annemic processor on large comprssion/decompression tasks. The small static swap gives the ROM some 'breathing room' which reduces most lags/stalls on boot and wake from sleep. Better but not great.
Browsing is particularly taxing on this device (albeit typical behavior on a low RAM gizmo). Might try a browser that renders in the cloud like Opera Mini or Opera w/data saver enabled. Stick to a tab or two and use the integrated ad blocker (I prefer VPN based blockers but that's OT). Even with those measures browsing will be a painful experience if the tab is doing anything else that actively utilizes limited resources. Good luck.
I'll give that a go. Two things:
My system reports 256mb Zram - is that compressed into 64mb or something?
Opera mini doesn't work on the Fire 7, nearest I found is puffin - which is heavy slow and buggy
thephatmaster said:
I'll give that a go. Two things:
My system reports 256mb Zram - is that compressed into 64mb or something?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My error; forgot Mustang defaults to 256MB ZRAM on FireOS v6. That could part of the problem when fully utilized as it reduces available uncompressed RAM which is much faster given the low end processor which must handle compression/decompression. Note ZRAM only consumes as much RAM as needed. A tool like DiskInfo will give a graphical readout of utilization.
thephatmaster said:
Opera mini doesn't work on the Fire 7, nearest I found is puffin - which is heavy slow and buggy
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try the full version of Opera with 'data saver' enabled. In that mode it operates much like Opera Mini from a workload and memory footprint perspective. Mini works fine on the hardware; FireOS v6 is the bad boy (likely missing libraries).