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Smartphones have become our digital homes and just like the places we physically live in, they get cluttered with stuff over time until there’s literally no space left for anything else. Luckily, freeing up space on your phone is much easier than cleaning your house or apartment.
Below, we’ll show you a few things you can do to remove some unnecessary files from your phone and give yourself some breathing room.
Back up your photos and videos to the cloud and delete some (or all) of them
If you’re using an Android phone (and if you’re reading this, that’s a safe bet), it’s almost certain that Google’s Photos app is already installed on it. However, if your device uses another app to manage photos and videos by default, it’s possible that you’re not signed in Google Photos and your photos aren’t backed up.
Open the Google Photos app. If you’re not signed in, you’ll be prompted to do so. After that, you’ll be asked how the photos should be stored. You have two options: Original quality and High quality.
Original quality means the photos and videos will be copied to Google’s servers exactly as they are on your phone. However, they will take up part of your Google Drive space, which can fill up quickly.
The “High quality” option means Google will compress your photos and videos before uploading them, but in return, you get no limit on how many photos you can store in Google Photos. For the average user, this option is the one to choose. The quality is good enough for almost all practical uses, including printing out photos if you want. If there’s ever a photo or a video you want to preserve in full quality, you can always manually upload it to your Google Drive.
Once you’re logged in Google Photos:
- Tap on the three-stripe menu in the top left corner.
- Tap on Settings
- Tap on Back up & sync to adjust your settings
Use Google Photos Free up device storage to delete files
- Open Google Photos
- Tap on the three-stripe menu in the top left corner.
- Tap on Settings
- Tap on Free up device storage
- Tap on Free up [X amount]GB to confirm
Delete photos and videos manually
The easiest way to delete photos in bulk is to open your gallery app and go to All media/All photos and videos. Then, if the app allows you, you can select all files and deselect the ones you want to keep, if you’re planning to delete the majority of your photos. Alternatively, of course, you can scroll through the thumbnails and select only those that you want to delete.
Delete app data
Cache and app data are often culprits of ballooning the size an app takes on your phone and slowly taking up precious storage space. However, if you get to the point where your phone is running out of free space, newer Android versions will automatically delete cached files. They are non-essential files that apps have stored in order to speed up certain processes. Since they pile up over time there’s a good chance that you’re not even benefiting from most of the stuff that’s kept around just in case.
When it comes to App Data, things aren’t as simple. This where the data related to your personal use is stored. Deleting it would likely result in the app behaving as it was just installed on your device. For some apps, that’s not really a problem. Music and video streaming apps can store large amounts of app data that’s harmless to delete. You just have to sign in with your credentials after that and you’re good to go.
For other apps, however, deleting the app data could mean losing valuable in-app settings or files. If you clean the app data from your notes app you’ll likely lose all your saved notes (unless it’s cloud-based).
Keep that in mind and choose wisely when it’s safe for you to do it.
Uninstall apps you don’t use
If you’ve had your phone for a long time, chances are that it’s become home for plenty of apps you don’t use. Games, in particular, can take up a lot of valuable storage space.
By going to Settings > Apps, you’ll get a list of all the apps on your phone and the amount of storage they’re using. Some phones will even show the last time each app was used, so you can get rid of the unused ones even easier.
Use a dedicated cleaning app
CCleaner
Avast Cleanup & Boost
AVG Cleaner
Contact Information:
Georgi Zarkov
Tags:
, Wire, United States, English
Contact Information:
Georgi Zarkov

