Updated
Updated · Android Police · Jun 18
Pixel Frees 2GB RAM by Cutting Android Background Processes to 0
Updated
Updated · Android Police · Jun 18

Pixel Frees 2GB RAM by Cutting Android Background Processes to 0

1 articles · Updated · Android Police · Jun 18

Summary

  • Setting Android’s background process limit to zero freed 2GB of RAM on the author’s Pixel and delivered a noticeable boost in battery life and performance after a week of use.
  • Developer options let users switch from the default standard limit—roughly 20 cached background processes on many phones—to “No background processes,” with the effect visible in Running Services in real time.
  • Firebase Cloud Messaging means core apps such as phone, messages, Gmail and Facebook can still receive most push notifications even when cached background processes are blocked.
  • The trade-off was modest but clear: email alerts arrived 10 to 15 seconds later, some apps opened more slowly, and location-based features sometimes needed the app to be opened manually.

Insights

This Android trick promises huge battery gains, but what essential app features does it secretly break in the process?
If one setting dramatically boosts performance, why does Google hide this powerful feature from everyday Android users?
Android 17 now kills memory-hogging apps. Does this make the famous 'no background processes' tweak obsolete?