what for and why do OMNIA 2 reserved 50% of it RAM?
#302
Posted 11 May 2010 - 01:05 PM
#303
Posted 13 May 2010 - 06:39 AM
It would require some virtual memory management ? Being a newbie I am not sure if virtual memory management exist for Windows Mobile or not...
#304
Posted 13 May 2010 - 12:55 PM
#305
Posted 17 May 2010 - 08:26 AM
#306
Posted 17 May 2010 - 03:58 PM
#307
Posted 21 May 2010 - 12:24 AM
Free Program Memory originally from FRESH START, no changes = 29Mb
After standard usage apps used then closed (Opera, phone, Media Player, etc.) = 24Mb
After apply the following three reg edits (I didn’t really notice a significant improvement individually… 1Mb here, 2Mb there…)
FRESH START, no changes = 34Mb
After standard usage, all apps closed = 29Mb
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Shell\LowMem
Change ProgramMem from 17 to 96
AND
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\GDI\GLYPHCACHE ->
change limit from 32768 to 16384 (original post says 8192)
change limit0 from 7328 to 24576 (original post says 8192)
AND
HKLM\System\OOM->
change cbLow from ? to 32768
change cbVlow from ? to 32768
change cpLow from ? to 16
change cpVlow from 64 to 16
(P.S. I forgot to write original numbers down before change, so if someone could please let me know in case I need to change them back)
By far the biggest improvement was removing just three unnecessary apps from the \Windows\Startup directory.
FRESH START = 51Mb
After standard usage, all apps closed = 45Mb
PlayerAutoUpdate
ScreenCapture
AutoRotation
Notes on this:
PlayerAutoUpdate – I just now manually update as needed when I load any new media on
ScreenCapture – Reassigned the task switcher button from Task Switcher to the old WinMo Task Manager
AutoRotation – I have manually assigned task switcher press+hold button to rotate anyway.
And finally the last step I took was to install Chainfire’s AutoClosePatch:
After standard usage, all apps closed = 49Mb
All the above changes has definitely increased the usability of this phone, and I hope all the information I gathered will help at least a few of you.
To test out how many apps I could load at once now with all these changes, I just went crazy…
With all the following apps loaded I still had 30Mb free!
GarminXT
Opera
Windows Media Player
Messaging
Google Maps
Unit Converter
Phone Dialler
Calculator
SK Tools
Marketplace
Scheduler
File Explorer
Messenger
#308
Posted 21 May 2010 - 12:47 AM
tothezenith, on May 21 2010, 00:24, said:
Free Program Memory originally from FRESH START, no changes = 29Mb
After standard usage apps used then closed (Opera, phone, Media Player, etc.) = 24Mb
After apply the following three reg edits (I didn’t really notice a significant improvement individually… 1Mb here, 2Mb there…)
FRESH START, no changes = 34Mb
After standard usage, all apps closed = 29Mb
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Shell\LowMem
Change ProgramMem from 17 to 96
AND
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\GDI\GLYPHCACHE ->
change limit from 32768 to 16384 (original post says 8192)
change limit0 from 7328 to 24576 (original post says 8192)
AND
HKLM\System\OOM->
change cbLow from ? to 32768
change cbVlow from ? to 32768
change cpLow from ? to 16
change cpVlow from 64 to 16
(P.S. I forgot to write original numbers down before change, so if someone could please let me know in case I need to change them back)
By far the biggest improvement was removing just three unnecessary apps from the \Windows\Startup directory.
FRESH START = 51Mb
After standard usage, all apps closed = 45Mb
PlayerAutoUpdate
ScreenCapture
AutoRotation
Notes on this:
PlayerAutoUpdate – I just now manually update as needed when I load any new media on
ScreenCapture – Reassigned the task switcher button from Task Switcher to the old WinMo Task Manager
AutoRotation – I have manually assigned task switcher press+hold button to rotate anyway.
And finally the last step I took was to install Chainfire’s AutoClosePatch:
After standard usage, all apps closed = 49Mb
All the above changes has definitely increased the usability of this phone, and I hope all the information I gathered will help at least a few of you.
To test out how many apps I could load at once now with all these changes, I just went crazy…
With all the following apps loaded I still had 30Mb free!
GarminXT
Opera
Windows Media Player
Messaging
Google Maps
Unit Converter
Phone Dialler
Calculator
SK Tools
Marketplace
Scheduler
File Explorer
Messenger
or you get a lite ROM and could easily get 100+MB of usable RAM on boot. Of course we still need to figure out how to reduce the reserved RAM, maybe reserve 15MB from my storage just for pagepool? that would give us an extra 15MB
This post has been edited by jebise: 21 May 2010 - 12:47 AM
#309
Posted 21 May 2010 - 08:56 AM
jebise, on May 21 2010, 10:47, said:
I was talking about system memory, not storage memory. We can't release much reserved memory, but can take steps to increase the available RAM so apps dont run out and start closing.
#310
Posted 21 May 2010 - 02:14 PM
tothezenith, on May 21 2010, 08:56, said:
i also meant system memory, if you use tw2 JE1 ROM with that not only do you get 300MB of device storage but 100MB of usable system memory aka RAM.
#311
Posted 21 May 2010 - 03:59 PM
There's plenty of RAM available to run the phone smoothly with a nice UI experience, if you simply stick to the pre-installed software. Samsung, like every device mfg these days, tries to provide a "complete" product -- i.e., something that doesn't need any other applications/software added, or running resident all the time, to make full use of the phone.
There's all the multimedia functionality (touchplayer, etc.), PIM stuff (Office Mobile, email, etc.), communications, photo, and on and on. If you can be satisfied with TouchWiz, and all the other built-in apps, the phone is very nice, performs well, and does pretty well with the hardware config, including RAM, provided.
For most of us here, that is a big "So What?!?!?", or, "Don't Care!". No matter which brand of WM phone, we "advanced user" types will toss a lot of the existing s/w, especially shells, players, and on and on, and tweak tweak tweak the hell out of the thing. This means we wind up with RAM hungry, always-resident things like SPB Mobile Shell, task monitors/managers, and other stuff, and -- here's another biggie -- we're tend to be people that value multitasking a lot, which translates into leaving various routine apps loaded and running, like Opera.
This quickly eats up free RAM, and with Windows Mobile's braindead memory management system, can start causing problems with as much as 20-40MB of "free" (see my analysis in this thread to understand that "free" doesn't really mean what you think in WM) memory unused.
Samsung blew it. Their competitors, particularly HTC seem to "get it". RAM is so cheap, that realistically Samsung could have doubled the RAM in the device without a price change. The hit to their profit margin would be tiny. Even if that is an issue, just bump the price by the wholesale cost of the larger chip -- seriously, we're talking a few bucks here. Something that carriers wouldn't blink at to sign you up to a 2 year contract.
Finally, there's always the option of offering two different versions... The Omnia II, and the Omnia II Pro, for example. The Pro has 512MB of RAM. It costs a little more. I would have paid the extra $50 or whatever it would have been without blinking.
I don't know if the memory is a conventional discrete IC, but I'd be surprised if it wasn't. It would be really interesting to take an O2 and replace the SMT IC with the same mfg, type, product line, etc. but with twice the memory, and see what happens. I would expect that the rest of the hardware, and WM, would see this and simply configure properly for it, but can't be sure. It would be an interesting experiment. One that I can't afford to do
#312
Posted 21 May 2010 - 07:12 PM
dwallersv, on May 21 2010, 15:59, said:
There's plenty of RAM available to run the phone smoothly with a nice UI experience, if you simply stick to the pre-installed software. Samsung, like every device mfg these days, tries to provide a "complete" product -- i.e., something that doesn't need any other applications/software added, or running resident all the time, to make full use of the phone.
There's all the multimedia functionality (touchplayer, etc.), PIM stuff (Office Mobile, email, etc.), communications, photo, and on and on. If you can be satisfied with TouchWiz, and all the other built-in apps, the phone is very nice, performs well, and does pretty well with the hardware config, including RAM, provided.
For most of us here, that is a big "So What?!?!?", or, "Don't Care!". No matter which brand of WM phone, we "advanced user" types will toss a lot of the existing s/w, especially shells, players, and on and on, and tweak tweak tweak the hell out of the thing. This means we wind up with RAM hungry, always-resident things like SPB Mobile Shell, task monitors/managers, and other stuff, and -- here's another biggie -- we're tend to be people that value multitasking a lot, which translates into leaving various routine apps loaded and running, like Opera.
This quickly eats up free RAM, and with Windows Mobile's braindead memory management system, can start causing problems with as much as 20-40MB of "free" (see my analysis in this thread to understand that "free" doesn't really mean what you think in WM) memory unused.
Samsung blew it. Their competitors, particularly HTC seem to "get it". RAM is so cheap, that realistically Samsung could have doubled the RAM in the device without a price change. The hit to their profit margin would be tiny. Even if that is an issue, just bump the price by the wholesale cost of the larger chip -- seriously, we're talking a few bucks here. Something that carriers wouldn't blink at to sign you up to a 2 year contract.
Finally, there's always the option of offering two different versions... The Omnia II, and the Omnia II Pro, for example. The Pro has 512MB of RAM. It costs a little more. I would have paid the extra $50 or whatever it would have been without blinking.
I don't know if the memory is a conventional discrete IC, but I'd be surprised if it wasn't. It would be really interesting to take an O2 and replace the SMT IC with the same mfg, type, product line, etc. but with twice the memory, and see what happens. I would expect that the rest of the hardware, and WM, would see this and simply configure properly for it, but can't be sure. It would be an interesting experiment. One that I can't afford to do
if they where smart they would have done this even 384MB would be more then enough and if they had then there profit margin would be 10x higher in sells. Talking to a bell rep that new jack s*** about phones said get the iphone its a better product because it just a lot faster then the omnia. Now if each rep did that around the world and you can clearly see the difference in performance between the two at the store, the average joe would always pick the iphone. Only reason i did not was because of lite ROM's. This alone is takes a good phone and giving it bad reviews and because the manfactures where to cheap to think it through.
Side by side the omnia is super slow so the locgial choice is iphone for average people, even through the omnia far surpasses the iphones hardware
This post has been edited by jebise: 21 May 2010 - 07:24 PM
#313
Posted 22 May 2010 - 10:41 AM
Can we find something to reset the gwes.exe without doind soft reset on mobile ???
If we can do this maybe we can fix the problem with gwes leaks !!!!
thanksssss
#314
Posted 16 June 2010 - 01:36 PM
#315
Posted 29 June 2010 - 02:42 PM
It was the only solution that worked for me on HD2 and it uses OS tricks to prevent programs from been superseded so should work on any other WM6.5 phone as well.
#316
Posted 15 December 2010 - 07:07 PM
Also, would it have killed samsung to include one 3 cent LED for notifications
Eboot: JI1
CSC: Bell default
#317
Posted 16 December 2010 - 02:50 AM
- ← Gwes.exe problem
- i8000 & Verizon SCH-i920 Omnia II - http://i8000.MoDaCo.com
- Ask Softwere aplication alkitab and dictionary →







