
"Your Galaxy Watch is not so different from your phone or even a messy room. When put to great use, it, too, gets cluttered. By continually using your Galaxy Watch, regularly switching between apps and functionalities, or running too many apps at the same time, you're bogging it down with data that clutters it and slows performance. This results in slower performance, frozen screens, and an annoying user experience."
"Luckily, hope isn't lost -- and you don't need to buy another device to fix this issue. In fact, I'd advise against doing so whenever you're confronting any performance issue with your technology. Before you shell out more money on a new device, there are some tips and tricks you can use to breathe new life into an old one."
The Galaxy Watch accumulates temporary cache data through frequent app use, switching, and multitasking, which clutters memory and causes slowdowns, frozen screens, lag, and increased battery drain. Clearing cache removes accumulated temporary files and can restore responsiveness without buying a new device. Restarting the watch often leaves cached data intact, so manual cache clearing provides a deeper cleanup. The cache functions like a garbage can that fills and overflows if not emptied, requiring periodic disposal of junk to maintain performance. Samsung notes system-driven memory optimization, but user-initiated cache clearing remains an easy, practical maintenance step to revive older devices.
Read at ZDNET
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