Bloatware Pushes the Galaxy S23 Android OS To an Incredible 60GB (arstechnica.com) 92
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: As a smartphone operating system, Android strives to be a lightweight OS so it can run on a variety of hardware. The first version of the OS had to squeeze into the T-Mobile G1, with only a measly 256MB of internal storage for Android and all your apps, and ever since then, the idea has been to use as few resources as possible. Unless you have the latest Samsung phone, where Android somehow takes up an incredible 60GB of storage. Yes, the Galaxy S23 is slowly trickling out to the masses, and, as Esper's senior technical editor Mishaal Rahman highlights in a storage space survey, Samsung's new phone is way out of line with most of the ecosystem. Several users report the phone uses around 60GB for the system partition right out of the box. If you have a 128GB phone, that's nearly half your storage for the Android OS and packed-in apps. That's four times the size of the normal Pixel 7 Pro system partition, which is 15GB. It's the size of two Windows 11 installs, side by side. What could Samsung possibly be putting in there?!
We can take a few guesses as to why things are so big. First, Samsung is notorious for having a shoddy software division that pumps out low-quality code. The company tends to change everything in Android just for change's sake, and it's hard to imagine those changes are very good. Second, Samsung may want to give the appearance of having its own non-Google ecosystem, and to do that, it clones every Google app that comes with its devices. Samsung is contractually obligated to include the Google apps, so you get both the Google and Samsung versions. That means two app stores, two browsers, two voice assistants, two text messaging apps, two keyboard apps, and on and on. These all get added to the system partition and often aren't removable.
Unlike the clean OSes you'd get from Google or Apple, Samsung sells space in its devices to the highest bidder via pre-installed crapware. A company like Facebook will buy a spot on Samsung's system partition, where it can get more intrusive system permissions that aren't granted to app store apps, letting it more effectively spy on users. You'll also usually find Netflix, Microsoft Office, Spotify, Linkedin, and who knows what else. Another round of crapware will also be included if you buy a phone from a carrier, i.e., all the Verizon apps and whatever space they want to sell to third parties. The average amount users are reporting is 60GB, but crapware deals change across carriers and countries, so it will be different for everyone.
We can take a few guesses as to why things are so big. First, Samsung is notorious for having a shoddy software division that pumps out low-quality code. The company tends to change everything in Android just for change's sake, and it's hard to imagine those changes are very good. Second, Samsung may want to give the appearance of having its own non-Google ecosystem, and to do that, it clones every Google app that comes with its devices. Samsung is contractually obligated to include the Google apps, so you get both the Google and Samsung versions. That means two app stores, two browsers, two voice assistants, two text messaging apps, two keyboard apps, and on and on. These all get added to the system partition and often aren't removable.
Unlike the clean OSes you'd get from Google or Apple, Samsung sells space in its devices to the highest bidder via pre-installed crapware. A company like Facebook will buy a spot on Samsung's system partition, where it can get more intrusive system permissions that aren't granted to app store apps, letting it more effectively spy on users. You'll also usually find Netflix, Microsoft Office, Spotify, Linkedin, and who knows what else. Another round of crapware will also be included if you buy a phone from a carrier, i.e., all the Verizon apps and whatever space they want to sell to third parties. The average amount users are reporting is 60GB, but crapware deals change across carriers and countries, so it will be different for everyone.
Re: Yea but (Score:1)
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Careful, though. They have some unworthy stuff under that label too. The Moto G Play has low-end specs that really belong in the E budget series.
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Re: Yea but (Score:2)
Re: Yea but (Score:2)
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Yes Apple certainly scares me into using Samsung instead.
This might be just a mistake or an issue of some kind. My S22 Ultra is under 30gb with the latest update and there's no way there's another >30gb added to the new phone.
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I love my s22 and right now it says it's using about 41.08g. No idea why but I'm enjoying the phone all the same. Including 7gbs of audio files, the whole phone is only 38% utilized and I can't see how I'll ever fill that up. Seems fine to me.
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How much total built in storage did yours come with? My S22 Ultra says the system is using 57GB (of 512GB).
I don't know android's file system at all; but I wouldn't be surprised if there is a 'system' partition, that's sized to a particular reserved size depending on the total built in storage, and even if its half empty that whole partition is just added under 'system files' in the storage analysis graph, because you can't use it for anything else anyway.
That's my guess at least, and the only thing i can
Re:Yea but (Score:5, Insightful)
It's like having to choose between the early Wild West or Soviet Union, not much in between.
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Re: Yea but (Score:1)
Re: Yeap: it's FUD (the smell is very heavy) (Score:1)
Thank you for the insight; that one's obviously a shill and definitely not very bright.
Re: Yea but (Score:2)
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Says the dumb people trying to convince themselves. Have you tried uninstalling or disabling the $4b google changes?
I've used multiple custom ROMs. Samsung makes it even more difficult to do so thanks to things like Knox. I prefer my phone to actually be mine. That rules out Apple as well. I'm working to switch myself over to a Pixel 3a running one of the various Linux based phone OS' such as Ubuntu Touch or Droidian.
Android apps are tiny (Score:2)
It's a zip file (apk) with some Java bytecode in it. It compresses really well. Now the assets, where you include a pixel perfect PNG for every resolution device you make, takes a massive amount of spcae and does not compress well. Using scalable graphics or lossy compression would help. Running optimization to discard assets during install that will never be used is another.
Half taken up by the system? (Score:2)
Sounds like the earlier Android days when I owned one. After a few apps the 16gb phone would be nearly filled. You could move some apps to the SD card but some wouldn't give you that option. Eventually I rooted the phone and deleted some things manually to regain some space.
Re: Half taken up by the system? (Score:2)
Please! (Score:4, Interesting)
Bloat is the sole reason I left Samsung. Let me permanently remove all that trash, and I'll think about returning. Until then I'm sticking with the Pixel.
Re:Please! (Score:5, Informative)
Try Motorola Moto G. Very little bloatware, as close to stock Android as it gets. And the phones are only about $200 unlocked.
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Re: Please! (Score:2)
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Until then I'm sticking with the Pixel.
Can you remove all the trash from the Pixel?
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Until then I'm sticking with the Pixel.
Can you remove all the trash from the Pixel?
What's your definition of trash and how much work are you willing to put into it? Can't answer your question without specifics
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If you'd buy at least one of these too, if anyone made one, just reply, "Me too," or "What he said," or "I'll buy what he's wanting!" to this post.
I'd say the chances of such a beast existing in the wild are roughly the square root of naff all...
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Shit dude, take your fucking meds.
Screw Samsung (Score:1)
This is half the reason why I dumped them for another Android provider. That and their interface was utter garbage.
Spares (Score:2)
I've found that's generally a good thing. They both suck in different ways such that it's nice to have a back-up app when one can't do the job, and you don't have time to shop for a 3rd party one.
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The difference being you have way more control over the OS under Windows, and can arguably remove all bloatware.
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MS don't throw in so much bloatware, third party OEMs do... A lot of the MS bloat is backwards compatibility cruft - eg a complete set of 32bit libs alongside 64bit libs, backwards compatibility to earlier versions of many APIs including ones which are now deprecated. Apple are far more aggressive at cutting off backwards compatibility.
You have just as much control over macos as windows, in some cases more because many parts of macos are open source.
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Once upon a time, MS didn't put much bloatware in. Almost none.
Now, you pay for the OS, and you need to remove the crap they put in. That others paid for to put in.
It was a nice feeling to receive some new kit, watch it boot. Laugh at the various Anti-Virus and hard disk optimisers offer you "Free trial" and collect your credit card. Then boot from clean media and blow it all away. Or Linux, or OS/2, or BSD if that's your kink.
No longer is it true "if it's free, YOU are the product", it's just "YOU are the
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Once upon a time, MS didn't put much bloatware in. Almost none.
Now, you pay for the OS, and you need to remove the crap they put in. That others paid for to put in.
It was a nice feeling to receive some new kit, watch it boot. Laugh at the various Anti-Virus and hard disk optimisers offer you "Free trial" and collect your credit card. Then boot from clean media and blow it all away. Or Linux, or OS/2, or BSD if that's your kink.
No longer is it true "if it's free, YOU are the product", it's just "YOU are the product". Collecting a fee from you, for selling your info is just icing on the cake. While I wouldn't call Windows mega bloated with spyware 3rd party apps, it is still too bloated. (and not to forget the MS's own telemetry).
Fresh install of Windows 11 on a business model Precision laptop. From the start menu I'm seeing Candy Crush, Instagram, TikTok, Spotify, ESPN, WhatsApp and Prime Video as well as all the Xbox Live shit tossed in there as well. I'm fine with having the Microsoft Store and a basic suite of productivity apps. I'm even fine with having some very basic games like Solitaire and the like. When you're advertising for a third party (or several) on a fresh image, that's nothing but bloat.
Re: like Mac vs. Windows all over again (Score:2)
Re:like Mac vs. Windows all over again (Score:4, Insightful)
So it doesn't seem very clean to me.
Non-issue (Score:1)
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My Note9 was supported between 2018 and July 2022.
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My last/only Samsung (a S3 mini) was obsolete within 6 months of being purchased (a couple of months after it was released), so never going there again...
It did soldier on for a while thanks to Cyanogenmod et al, but even they gave up on it after a couple of years (probably should never have bought it to be honest)
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Samsung (Score:3)
First a disclaimer: This A52 5G on my desk is my first Samsung phone (about 1.5 years ago and going strong), after using lots of models from all kinds of companies- Google, Motorola, HTC, etc, etc. It is, by far, the best phone I have ever had, in every respect, and isn't even expensive. It is packed with features, had the headset jack I want, great cameras, FANTASTIC OLED screen with almost zero wasted space, in-screen fingerprint sensor, SD card slot, great battery life, physical controls on the side, and is fast and updated regularly. Third major OS upgrade and still hasn't fallen apart (like every other phone has). I couldn't be more pleased.
Yes, it is true Samsung includes their "version" of lots of the Android apps. But they are also often *BETTER*, like their Email app- which just works and doesn't force me to use Google's infrastructure. Or their great media player or file browser. And I don't mind having these alternative apps. I *like* choice.
I don't even mind pre-installed non-Samsung software. But what I *DO* hate is that these should be REMOVABLE, and not installed on the system partition. Yes, I can "disable" most of them, but not uninstall them, and they do rob space. So yeah, Samsung, you are doing a lot of really good stuff, but this is a very legit complaint.
Re:Samsung (Score:4, Insightful)
If you liked choice, you'd just download one of the countless mail apps on play store, or get one from github like I do. Same for media player and file browser, and everything else. For example, I use self updating fairemail straight from github repository, and VLC and total commander from play store.
What you like is having shit shoveled down your throat and asking for seconds. Because as you correctly note samsung crap cannot be uninstalled. You're stuck with it regardless if you like it or not. And best part is, shit like Bixby is always running in the background. So it's not just the storage space. It's RAM and CPU cycles. It's battery drainage. And of course, spying on you.
Oh and "disabling them totally disables them". Oh you sweet summer child. Run an OS update and then check again. Almost every time, they're all re-enabled.
Heck, in case of many of them, just restarting the headset will re-enable them.
But it's telling that basic flagship features are all "omg amazing, surely no one else has them" for you.
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>"If you liked choice, you'd just download one of the countless mail apps on play store, or [...] What you like is having shit shoveled down your throat and asking for seconds "
My point was that the article implies the Samsung apps are crap, and many of them are not. The world is not ending because Samsung phones have a suite of Samsung apps and services installed and non-removable and non-disableable.
>"shit like Bixby is always running in the background"
I have no interest in Bixby, it does consume a
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Pretty much every major phone manufacturer has a variant of "gaming mode" nowadays with various levels of features, and I'm pretty sure google calendar has followed system theme for a very long time on android.
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May I ask a sincere question? What did Gallery do better than Google Photos in the history of ever?
Google Photos has pretty much always had amazing face, context and object recognition and it has always operated concurrently with photos.google.com on the web.
Samsung Gallery syncs to OneDrive, which AFAIK doesn't have any sort of photo-specific search nor useful web interface for images. I think it exists primarily to hinder people from switching off Samsung devices; those who never bothered to open Google P
Re: Samsung (Score:2)
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It's called "being used to it". Many people living next to a landfill don't notice horrible smells after a while. You adapt to things in your environment that you cannot help.
Heck, you don't need to go that far. Put on cracked glasses and wear them for a month. You'll stop noticing the crack. Same phenomenon.
Re: Samsung (Score:2)
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First, the fact that you're unable to see anything other than black and white in this is telling. Second, you clearly didn't even read the rest of my point, and focus on a single red herring that was merely a small part of the point, pretending really hard that this is was the point in its entirety.
When you have something that is bad, but it's such an integral part of your identity that to admit that it's bad would cause you pain. So you instead cope and pretend really hard that it's good instead, usually b
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And I don't mind having these alternative apps. I *like* choice
wait ... your samsung doesn't have an app marketplace? look again, it's probably called "google play" and that's where abundant choice is to be found for every android phone (plus you can also sideload, e.g. f-droid has some nifty little pearls).
if samsung explicitly doesn't want you to get that choice from the proper source that can never be a good sign. either they don't really trust their apps are good enough for you (or any of the billion android users for that matter) to even bother fetching them ... o
For comparison's sake (Score:2)
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I'd love to, but Samsung started locking all the bootloaders. I got around it with my S7 by buying the Canadian version off eBay since that one still had an unlocked bootloader and would work fine with AT&T. But my S10e is my first Android phone (all of which were Samsung) that I haven't rooted and installed a clean, custom ROM on.
I'm not even sure there are any custom ROMs that'd work on an S10e, judging from my last peek at XDA.
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I have the same problem with the S10e. And what's worse, there are different S10e models. One is supported, the rest are not (inluding the U1 model I have).
That's why it's complicated to upgrade (Score:2)
This means updates are even harder to get because they come in {Model} x {Country}, with so many models and countries your particular combination might be out of luck.
Why not buy a vanilla Android phone? (Score:2)
I see no reason to buy any Android phone full of useless bloatware when you can get perfectly fine vanilla Android phones. Why is anyone buying this Samsung trash?
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On the high end, Samsung S series phones usually have the best screens you'll likely find on a phone, being both very bright and high resolution. Samsung phones with Snapdragon rather than its in-house Exynos SoCs also tend to be near the top of the pack for performance within a given generation.
Until a couple years ago, Samsung was still including both SD card and headphone jacks on their phones, and they were also offering large amounts of RAM as well (the S22+ and S23+ top out at 8GB RAM rather than the
"low-quality code" ? Understatement (Score:2)
Only time will tell if this new piece of something useless has this #GSOD feature [youtube.com]
But "the size of two Windows 11 installs" ??? M$ has this fat OS problem of its own already. And @Samsung @SamsungMobile managed to double that ??? Wow, impressive.
Public service message (Score:2)
Don't buy Samsung phones (Score:2)
Out of the box you will get:
Re: Don't buy Samsung phones (Score:2)
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No it isn't. This shit is appearing on phones in Europe. Not subsidized phones, but actually full price contract free phones. And how exactly are people to know that a phone does or does not contain malware, especially when it comes from a supposedly reputable firm like Samsung? The answer is they don't and shouldn't have to. This crap uses dark patterns to insinuate its way onto phones and is an inexcusable betrayal of consumer trust.
I'd add that this is a pattern that Samsung is repeating across other pro
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No, it's not "up front". It's indefensible that anyone would anyone justify this garbage yet here you are...
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This is a stupid argument. People don't buy a phone in the understanding it is laden with shit. That's just you justifying a terrible sleazy practice that Samsung is doing to its own customers.
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Samsung runs a lot of it's own "value add" (Score:4, Funny)
Samsung's OS goes beyond just cloning and change for change's sake but also integrates into a shit ton of other Samsung produces, to a frigging annoying level. ... popup: "Do you wish to clone your screen to this TV"?
Our bathroom is behind our living room, the ceramic throne literally half a foot away from the TV. Take my phone to the thinking chair, sit down,
No I don't. It's a shit ideal, and while it is the place for shit ideas it's not the time.
It's not all bad. Some is good. Samsung pass works really well, integrates into all applications. Knox works brilliantly to keep work and home profiles separate to a system level which includes not just protecting companies from employee's personal bullshit, but visa versa as well (e.g. isolating pushed SSL certs to the work profile so companies can't snoop employee's personal traffic).
Samsung Browser is also just Google but with the ability to install an adblocker, i.e. an actual functional browser unlike the turd that is Google Chrome Mobile.
And SmartSwitch is a godsend when upgrading a phone. Press the button, hold the two phones back to back and the world magically transfers from one to the other including all settings, apps, data etc.
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Samsung pass works really well, integrates into all applications
good luck using a password manager made by the company that thinks a mobile os filled with nearly 60gb of bloat is a good idea. is your password 1234 by any chance?
Knox (...) visa versa
ditto for a security app. how you even bother about work/home separation and don't already use separate devices is beyond me. but to my real point, pardon my pedantry: it's "vice versa". it's always about the vice!
btw, google android has "magic transfers" and password managers out of the box, and "brave browser" is basically desktop chrome with a
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what can i say? enjoy!
longer answer: i reckon i have no idea how secure folder works. i'm happy it functionally works for you. i just don't see how putting two sensitive environments you absolutely want to keep separate into the same physical device, same discrete os image no less, is a smart idea, whatever software component it is you want to sell your soul to to keep them separated. this is just asking for trouble, unnecessarily, because the cost of a second phone is negligible for a business and there is
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good luck using a password manager made by the company that thinks a mobile os filled with nearly 60gb of bloat is a good idea. is your password 1234 by any chance?
I don't need luck. It works just fine. And the idea that bloatware and feature creep of an OS somehow leads to security issues in another app is just stupid. It's like saying "good luck getting 100000miles out of your car engine from a company who thinks red is a nice colour".
how you even bother about work/home separation and don't already use separate devices is beyond me.
Why would I carry around two devices? Why would I buy a second device when my company literally pays for one for me? and above all what am I being bothered about here? The integration is entirely seamless. It seems like an incredible b
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nah i was just drunk. btw your car analogy is wrong, as car analogies tend to be :-)
Get a Pixel and replace the OS (Score:2)
CalyxOS and LineageOS are a breeze to install
It's your phone
Get off my lawn (Score:2)
I can remember when my first computer had 16K of RAM and an accessory box upped that to 48K and everyone said "What the hell are you going to do with 48K of RAM?"
They have been the best phones (Score:2)
I had resisted buying Samsung phones because of the completely unnecessary changes to the user interface. Eventually, I wound up buying a Note 7 out of desperation to try and get something approaching reasonable battery life.
That phone was *incredible*. In a completely different league than anything I had before. I had one more Note and now have a Galaxy S22 Ultra, and they have all been fantastic phones.
They definitely come with lots of crapware and nonsense you have to disable or uninstall and I wish t
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DEX and NTFS drives make it nessesary (Score:1)
Paid trash ad? (Score:2)
Samsung = Locked Bootloader (Score:2)