Smartphones have been an indispensable part of our lives for well over a decade and as such, most people have downloaded more apps than they care to remember. Indeed, most mobile phone interfaces are filled to the brim with application icons from banking to social media to music and everything in between. But as phones can also be used for business, and those apps you need for work can get lost underneath everyting else, it's important to keep it tidy. Essentially, this means deleting apps and although that sounds straight forward, there's more to it than just holding the icon down and swiping it into a virtual bin.
When you buy an Android phone, it usually comes with preinstalled software. This software can be useful, or it can be an annoying drain on your phone's battery and processor. Usually there are two sets; software suites installed by the manufacturer, and software installed by your network provider. This can range from potentially useful apps such as standard apps like Visual Voicemail to apps you don't want, such as streaming services or step tracking apps. It may also be apps or content that a third party, such as a music service, have paid to pre-install on your phone.
Tech News. It might have been provided by the manufacturer, your mobile network, or as a part of Android itself. Before you start deleting apps, you should spend a few moments considering just why you want to get them off your phone.
Not all preinstalled apps on your smartphone will be of use to you. Apps you don't need but cannot uninstall are called bloatware. With our tips, you can delete, remove, disable, or at least hide preinstalled apps and bloatware. Bloatware is often commercial software that is preinstalled on a device by the manufacturer, whether it's useful or not, and tends to waste memory and resources. Sometimes you'll want to get rid of these apps that take up space on your apps list, home screen and internal storage.