

Taking these two benchmarks, we compared them against a benchmark taken right after cleaning the memory using a third party cleaner app. We benchmarked the phone on CPU and RAM usage right after restarting it, when the number of processes on memory are the bare minimum, and also after launching four memory hungry games and apps, where the memory is being taxed and apps are being offloaded from memory on opening any new app. Now, before we start, let us tell you a bit about the methodology we followed with this. We put such apps to test to figure out: Do memory cleaning apps really make your phone faster? There have been cases where using such an app has caused a lot of bugs to show up on the phone and even caused the phone to be stuck in an infinite loop of cleaning, which could not be resolved without dire measures. Most of us are unknown to the risk that sometimes accompanies such apps that interact with the CPU processes. It has become a common sight to see people tapping away at “Boost” or “Speed up” buttons and widgets on their phones to get rid of those irritating stutters and lags on phones. One such type of apps are the memory cleaning apps.


And there are a number of services which market themselves as the tools you need for that nudging. The budget phone market now contains a lot of phones which, although perform brilliantly at their price point, often need a little bit of nudging and pushing to overcome certain limitations. Not every smartphone comes with a truckload of RAM and a flagship level processor.
