this post was submitted on 23 Aug 2024
31 points (87.8% liked)
Google Pixel
1428 readers
3 users here now
The home of /r/GooglePixel on Lemmy and the Fediverse!
The place for everything related to Google Pixel devices, including news, reviews, tips, tutorials, rooting, and app discussions.
!googlepixel@lemdro.id
Rules
- Stay on topic: all posts should be related to Google Pixel devices.
- No offensive/low-effort content: avoid posting offensive or low-effort content that does not contribute positively to the community.
- No self-promotional spam: active community members are welcome to post their apps but should also participate in comments and discussions. Please do not post links to your own website, YouTube channel, or blog.
- No reposts/rehosted content: whenever possible, submit original sources. If the original source is not available in English, you may provide a translation. Reposts of the same content are not allowed.
- No editorializing titles: when submitting articles, do not change the titles. You may add the author's name if it is relevant.
- No piracy: sharing or discussing pirated content is strictly prohibited.
- No unauthorized polls/bots/giveaways: please do not create unauthorized polls, use bots, or organize giveaways without proper authorization.
- No affiliate links: posting affiliate links is not allowed.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
That's a weird way to spell "project manager who doesn't let developers waste time making efficient apps when they could just add more marketable features". The competition won't hesitate, and users will always flock to apps with more features and nicer UI over optimizations.
If you have enough RAM, there's no reason to - it's not like they are actually running and consuming CPU cycles. If you don't have enough RAM, you also don't need to - Android will do it for you. My phone with 3 GB of RAM could barely handle maps and a browser at once, so there were plenty of times when the map app restarted and recentered on my current position when I came back from checking the website of whatever company I looked at.
The recent apps screen is really just a history of open apps, with some of them maybe still in memory, and with some opaque mechanism for automatically removing old entries. You can reboot your phone and the apps will still be there with a screenshot of their last state. Doesn't mean they will get back to that state when you switch to them.