Nowadays, Android smartphones are outperforming Windows, Bada, Symbian and Blackberry phones. The Android operating system is very easy to use and also supports a lot of useful and fun applications. When you turn on any new Android smartphone, you wonder what you will find inside; what will be the apps and special functions contained within it? Anyway, when you find that there are some useless apps that you will never use and they consume your phone's memory and battery, you might want to uninstall them. Before uninstalling these applications, you will need to “root” the phone to gain super-user permissions that allow you to modify the operating system and critical applications. Read on to find out how.
Steps
Step 1. Root your Android smartphone
Go to Google to find out how to root your phone; include make and model in your search terms. Be careful not to brick the device, i.e. do not destroy it. If you encounter any errors and difficulties during the rooting process, the phone may not turn on anymore; carry out each operation carefully and with full knowledge of the facts.
Step 2. Install the “Uninstaller” from the Google Play Store
After you have rooted your phone, restart it and install this app from Play Store: Root App Delete, or open this link on your Android phone to install the app through your phone's browser: - https://play.google.com/ store / apps / details? id = zsj.android.uninstall & hl = en but first make sure the app is compatible with your device. If not, look for other similar applications that allow you to uninstall as root.
Step 3. Open the app and use it as needed
When you open the app, you will be asked for SUPER-USER permissions, which you should allow, or, in some cases, the app will automatically switch to SUPER-USER mode. The message "Super-user permissions to the application have been allowed" will appear on your device every time you open the app.
Step 4. Install any app you want
Open the Uninstaller app and find all the apps you don't need. The apps are marked with the.apk extension. For example, if you want to clear Google maps, scroll down to googlemaps.apk and uninstall it. Make sure you only delete applications that you will never need. If you delete critical applications for your system, your Android phone may no longer work. So be very careful.
Step 5. Now let's clean up the phone
Restart your phone in recovery mode. For the procedure to follow do an Internet search. You can use ClockworkModRecovery or your own custom recovery file. So, go to recovery and run the “Clean Cache Partition” process, then go to the “Advanced” tab and select “Clean Dalvik Cache” and restart your phone.
Advice
Follow the instructions carefully and clear the cache every week or once a month to free up the internal memory and clear the old cache that your phone no longer needs
Warnings
- Please backup your important files saved on your phone before rooting, otherwise you may lose all your data.
- Follow the instructions of the rooting process carefully, otherwise you risk breaking your phone.
- Check the compatibility of applications you install from third parties by checking the Google Play Store. These could slow down your phone.
- Be careful when rooting. You don't need to be a technician, but you still need to be careful not to damage your phone.