Greeting all, I’ve only ever been an android user, but I don’t think I’ve ever heard anyone talk about this. My Galaxy S21 is starting to have performance issues and I’m curious if a clean install would breath new life into it?

Does this help with android devices like a fresh install on a PC, or do android devices just get bogged down with updates? Would it be worth the trouble to back things up and do a factory reset?

Thanks!

  • knotthatone@lemmy.one
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    9 months ago

    Short answer, maybe, but go through your installed apps first & get rid of crap you don’t use. Even if you still decide to do a factory reset, no sense re-downloading garbage apps. Your phone is still modern enough it shouldn’t feel slow day-to-day so it’s probably one or more shitty apps causing the problem.

  • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    Factory reset is probably all you need.

    This wipes the user data partition, which deletes all your apps, and it also deletes any accounts on the phone.

    Do that, then run the Universal Debloat Utility disabling only the “safe” category. https://github.com/0x192/universal-android-debloater

    This is about the best you can easily do on Samsung, since they’re a bit bloated. It’s made a significant difference on some lower-end Sammy’s of friends and family (like the A series).

    Alternatively, if you don’t want to reset everything, you can try uninstalling what you don’t use (or anything that would be easy to reinstall), then run SD Maid and have it clean up orphans, etc. Then run Debloat.

    Keep in mind that as your data partition fills up, it can slow the phone. I find that under about 15%-20% free space I start to see lags.

  • x2XS2L0U@feddit.de
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    9 months ago

    If you’d install something like lineageOS you might be better off, because your phone doesn’t have to run all the bloatware Samsung ships with their devices. Some nice features of the device may not work then, though. I run custom roms on all my android devices.

    • Infinite_Indecision@midwest.socialOP
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      9 months ago

      I’ve considered doing this but I’m hesitant to do this for the first time on my primary device. I figure when I upgrade I may keep this phone to experiment on.

      • x2XS2L0U@feddit.de
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        9 months ago

        You may have a look at places like xda-developers forum to find out about the support your phone has. Some devices are hard to run custom ROMs on. If the support is good there’s nothing in the way to use it reliably on a daily basis

  • PlantObserver@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Up until December I was still using my old S10 without slowdown. Never factory reset, just debloated via adb and used KISS launcher (minimal mode). Since it was a snapdragon one, I couldn’t unlock the bootloader to install a custom rom. Had I been able to, I wouldn’t have bothered switching to a pixel and graphene os yet. Point being, if you debloat your phone using adb you should be fine in terms of slowdown. There’s guides on GitHub for what packages to remove safely.

    If you are able to unlock the bootloader and use a custom OS, even better.

  • xarexyouxmadx@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I think it’s likely updates. The phone was originally built with an earlier version of the OS in mind. Just a guess. I feel like this happens to all my phones eventually.

    Fwiw I have an old s21 fe version that I still play with (I have a pixel 8 now) and it feels more sluggish than it used to.

  • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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    9 months ago

    I know this question was from last week, but I have an only slightly different angle that I’d like to share.

    Android doesn’t benefit from reinstallation in the same way that a PC does because it uses a different app model. A PC can slow down due to accumulation of useless junk files, plugins, and services running in the background that you no longer use. On Android, you can have junk apps, but Android does a good job of bringing them to your attention by requiring a notification while an app runs in the background or else the apps and services get heavily throttled to avoid using the CPU if the user doesn’t access the app regularly. Android also provides clean removal of all files when you delete an application. Apps are very self-contained with few exceptions. If you removed all the apps you downloaded, the system is pretty much the same as its factory reset state.

    In the really old days, a PC could slow down due to fragmentation of the files on the disc over years of use. This is no longer a significant problem because flash storage offers fast random access even to highly fragmented files. Manufacturers actually recommend against attempting to defragment this media.

  • Verdant Banana@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    depends

    as long as it is an android image from the manufacturer for the drivers

    beyond that the part that contains the operating system the memory module is the same as desktop/ laptop, auto, and any other computers in one regard

    anything that contains, reads, or writes data will eventually lose integrity usually at 2-3 years sometimes up to five years