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How to make sense of Android Marshmallow's new memory manager

Android's new memory manager makes it easier than ever to make sense of how your Android phone is using its RAM.  . Compared to i...

Android's new memory manager makes it easier than ever to make sense of how your Android phone is using its RAM. 

memory android m.

Compared to iOS, Android has always given users more information about the underlying guts of the operating system. In Android Marshmallow, Google takes this one step further with a new memory manager that gives you all sorts of information on how your phone is using its RAM. Here’s how to navigate it.
Go to the Settings app, then tap Memory. Here you’ll get an at-a-glance overview of your phone’s memory usage for the past three hours: It includes your phone’s average total memory use for all apps and Android system components, your phone’s total memory, how much free memory remains, and the percent of memory currently in use. It also gives an indicator of how memory usage on your device has impacted its performance over that time.
memory manager overview
Android Marshmallow features a handy 
at-a-glance overview of how your device is 
using its memory.
If you’d like to get an idea of how your phone is managing its memory over a longer period of time, tap the downward-facing arrow next to “3 hours” and pick a different time span. You can view general memory usage stats for the last three, six, 12, or 24 hours.
memory per app
Which app is hogging the most memory, you ask? 
The App usage screen will tell you.
You can, of course, take a closer look at how individual apps are using memory. Tap Memory used by apps to get a breakdown of how much memory each running app is eating up. Again, it defaults to showing memory usage for the past three hours, but you can view stats for three, six, 12, and 24 hours, just as you can with the general overview.
memory app details
Tap an app name to get more information.
Tap the name of any app to get more nitty-gritty details, and to force-stop a problematic app (tap the Options menu—the three dots in the upper right—then tap Force stop).
Admittedly, a lot of this information is for gear-heads—if you have no interest in how your phone uses its RAM and it isn’t giving you any trouble, you probably won’t ever have to peek in the Memory panel. But it’s good to know that that information is there if you need it.

For comprehensive coverage of the Android ecosystem, visit Greenbot.com.

 

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