In his recent review of the Innjoo i1s, Mr Mo stated: What this translates to is that, of the 8GB internal storage stated in the specs, only 0.89GB is left for storage for apps. Not even up to 1GB . Some can attribute this to being one of the disadvantages of buying low end-smartphones, but then I’ll call this deliberate torture. Take a look at TECNO Phantom A and A+. For almost a period of 1 year, they were flagship phones from TECNO and sold at about N38,000. They shipped with 4GB internal storage. Out of this 4GB, 0.89GB is also reserved for apps while about 2GB is reserved for internal storage. When you install a few number of apps, you get the out of memory error. I’ve had a few friends bring their TECNO Phantoms (with this same issue) for me to troubleshoot. Moving apps to SD card doesn’t solve the problem. The only manageable way is to root, install Lucky Patcher, remove all odex files and odex all the system apps. This solution is temporary, because when you try to install more apps, the problem persists. This is quite a frustrating experience both for the acclaimed geeks and noobs. The fact that one has to enter gung-ho mode to be able to manage the situation is really terrible. The same issue is prevalent in the bigger Phantom A3 and Phantom Pad Mini. It seems the issue has been corrected in the new TECNO R7 and Phantom Z.

Samsung Does It Better

Most Samsung phones on the other hand are made differently. The internal storage is merged and shared among apps installation section and files/media section. What does this mean ? If you have a Samsung 16GB you might end up with 10GB (The 6GB is consumed by stock apps and Touchwiz skin). This 10GB left is used both by your apps and media. If you transfer up to 5GB of media apps to your phone, you have free 5GB for apps installation and media. If you install apps up to 2GB, you have 8GB left. If the storage is about to get filled, you have the option to delete some media or other files to free space. This is good convenience, and exactly how a phone’s storage should be. I don’t know of any other manufacturer that implements it this way, if there are others, please tell me. This whole situation got me asking so many questions. Why do some manufacturers partition internal storage? Isn’t it easier to leave it open and shared? Or is it the price we pay for buying Chinese Androids? Guys in case you have another solution to this TECNO storage for apps problem, feel free to share.

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