Why does internal storage keep growing over the time for no reason? At some point it becomes simply impossible to update apps, due to lack of sufficient memory space. Not even cache cleanup can save it, and I have moved as many apps as I could to SD card with no help.

The allocated RAM memory for my app is continuously growing, and I don't know why. 18MB should be the lower limit because that's where app starts from and 24MB should be the highest limit, because the Garbage Collector occurs when needed.


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I tend to write backend code a lot professionally. I am learning Kotlin to essentially replace Java for personal projects and I am wondering if Kotlin is picking up steam on server side development or is it mostly an android thing?

Is there a reason for this? I recall 64GB being enough until a few years ago. Now I see that fill up incredibly quickly. Even the OS install seems to have grown to android 11 taking almost 13gb on my phone ( I cannot imagine the OS being that large, but it is still ridiculous that 20% of my storage is gone from the get go). I can see some habitual changes that might have lead to 64gb feeling smaller and smaller. I take a lot more photos on my phone and expect to have them there (instead of offloading them into an external hdd). More apps have become "essentials" than they used to (in fact, some services that I used to use via their website have pushed their apps as the primary method to consume/utilize their service).

The android phone really is beginning to become a premier name in the smart phone industry. Im very interested to see how it does in the coming months. Everyone thought 2011 belonged to Apple but Android is really proving that wrong. Great blog!

While 3G remains the most dominant technology in the region, the adoption of 4G has accelerated, partly driven by the growing demand for faster speeds among younger consumers. Over the next five years, 4G adoption in the region will more than double to 45%.

5G momentum is also growing, although the initial focus for 5G deployment is on urban areas and industrial locations, where there is greater need for the technology. In 2030, 5G is expected to contribute $11 billion to the Sub-Saharan African economy, accounting for more than 6% of the overall economic impact of mobile.

As well as growing 5G momentum, other key trends shaping the mobile ecosystem include artificial intelligence and the opportunity for it to steer growth; improving smartphone access; a move towards circular economy principles in light of growing climate concerns; and the rise of fintech which is driving collaboration and innovation across the region.

Another finding is that, as is widely believed, there are still much more free apps on Android than iOS, but paid apps on Android are growing fast. This is important if Google wants to attract more developers to their platform -- they need to be able to make money.

In this post, we'll explore the extraordinary growth of the Python programming language in the last five years, as seen by Stack Overflow traffic within high-income countries. The term "fastest-growing" can be hard to define precisely, but we make the case that Python has a solid claim to being the fastest-growing major programming language.

You can see on Stack Overflow Trends that Python has been growing rapidly in the last few years. But for this post we'll focus on high-income countries, and consider visits to questions rather than questions asked (this tends to give similar results, but has less month-by-month noise, especially for smaller tags).

With a 27% year-over year-growth rate, Python stands alone as a tag that is both large and growing rapidly; the next-largest tag that shows similar growth is R. We see that traffic to most other large tags has stayed pretty steady within high-income countries, with visits to Android, iOS, and PHP decreasing slightly. We previously examined some of the shrinking tags like Objective-C, Perl and Ruby in our post on the death of Flash). We can also notice that among functional programming languages, Scala is the largest and growing, while F# and Clojure are smaller and shrinking, with Haskell in between and remaining steady.

There's an important omission from the above chart: traffic to TypeScript questions grew by an impressive 142% in the last year, enough that we left it off to avoid overwhelming the rest of the scale. You can also see that some other smaller languages are growing similarly or faster than Python (like R, Go and Rust), and there are a number of tags like Swift and Scala that are also showing impressive growth. How does their traffic over time compare to Python's?

Note that we're not saying these languages are in any way "competing" with Python. Rather, we're explaining why we'd treat their growth in a separate category; these were lower-traffic tags to start with. Python is an unusual case for being both one of the most visited tags on Stack Overflow and one of the fastest-growing ones. (Incidentally, it is also accelerating! Its year-over-year growth has become faster each year since 2013).

Outside of high-income countries Python is still the fastest growing major programming language; it simply started at a lower level and the growth began two years later (in 2014 rather than 2012). In fact, the year-over-year growth rate of Python in non-high-income countries is slightly higher than it is in high-income countries. We don't examine it here, but R, the other language whose usage is positively correlated with GDP, is growing in these countries as well.

I've been a mobile engineer myself, growing to the principal level, and later managed teams of mobile engineers. In this book, I share 30 pieces of advice to keep growing professionally. Get the book here.

Captain of the ship knows how to sink the boat. Stephen (the first non Finnish CEO in history of Nokia) joined in 2010 from Microsoft and made a deal to use Windows only despite the fact that Android was growing and already captured huge market share. There was a lot of pressure from Nokia employees to move to Android but he ignored all. He fired a lot of people. It was famous in Nokia Espo office (H/Q) that he is a Trojan Horse. He later sold Nokia mobile business to Microsoft and earned millions of dollars in the deal. Later, he joined Microsoft again. Looks like the plan was to promote Windows Mobile at the cost of Nokia (that failed badly)

I'm working on to establish a Corporate and Product Branding Consultancy in town (Accra, Ghana), and this article on Nokia, like others, is what I've been looking out for, to help learn and know how to start and grow an enterprise and keep it growing and succeeding decade after decade, century after century!

Interesting side note: While working in Japan around 2002, I heard "on the street" that Nokia ran a research center in Japan. Intended to tap the vast and growing Japanese mobile market. They saw everything that was coming in the Western world. Good cameras. Apps. Cost effective mobile internet & services. Mobile email messaging on a mass scale. Multi media devices. Long before the iPhone was invented. Nokia deemed the Japanese market too challenging and closed their research center. Turned a blind eye. The competition was already too far ahead.

With advanced video codecs, streaming platforms can dramatically improve the viewing experience, increase quality, decrease video payload, and reduce costs. The latest video codec standard H.265, or High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC), can deliver these benefits, but mobile devices need to be ready for the computing requirements demanded by the codec. In the 2018 Q2 Mobile Overview Report (MOVR), we analyze the growing support for hardware-accelerated HEVC decoding among mobile devices. 78% of iPhone and 57% of Android smartphone requests come from devices that support hardware-accelerated HEVC decoding. This growing support trend will benefit video streaming companies that architect their networks to leverage HEVC.

Although the vast majority of retail purchases still happen in-store, mobile's influence over these purchases is rapidly growing. According to Deloitte, 64 cents of every dollar spent in retail stores is influenced by digital,1 and we know that mobile is a big driver. In fact, 76% of people who conduct a local search on their smartphone visit a business within 24 hours and 28% of those searches result in a purchase.2

A smartphone is a mobile handset that empowers advanced access to internet-based facilities and other digital functions. Platforms including, iOS, Android, Windows Phone and others, support a broad range of applications created by third-party originators. Factors such as the governmental support to develop telecom infrastructure, budget-centric product launch, growing 5G technology, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and other technologies and importantly, the increasing disposable income are contributing to the market growth.

iOS segment is anticipated to grow exponentially owing to the rising demand for Apple phones. Additionally, Apple phones are witnessing growing demand from developing countries, such as India, China and South Africa and others, especially from the young population. iOS is more document-friendly than others and generates less heat than other OS.

The android segment holds the major shares in the market. Developed by Google LLC, android OS is utilized in almost every handset except Apple products and a few others. It offers a customizable user interface, affordable continuous development and an open ecosystem. That results in the highest shares in the market.

Windows and others segment are witnessing slow growth as approximately 90.0% of the market is captured by android and iOS segments. The expanding demand for android and iOS has lowered the demand for windows and others segment.

OEMs are original equipment manufacturers. They are predominantly launching their factory outlets across the countries without seeking help from third parties. As a result, the outlets are growing across the countries. For instance, in March 2021, Vivo Mobile Communication Co., Ltd. stated that the company is opening 150 exclusive stores in India to drive smartphone market share. However, the COVID-19 pandemic forced companies to shut their stores, thus, widening the buying from E-commerce sites. 006ab0faaa

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