![]() ![]() The Kindle app returned to where I left off in my book, Facebook behaved normally, and Flixster seemed no worse for the wear. Afterward I checked various important apps everything seemed normal. The process took longer than I expected - about 10 minutes. Still, iMobie makes this promise: "To create free space on your iPhone, PhoneClean will not endanger your Apps (data & progress), music, movies, photos or other useful content." And because I'd just synced my iPhone with iTunes (that is, I'd backed it up), I gritted my teeth and clicked Clean Up. However, I disabled the Cookie and Script Files category (which amounted to all of 254K), because I didn't want to risk the hassle of having to sign back into apps like Groupon and Netflix. There didn't seem to be any harm in letting PhoneClean, well, clean apps like these. Looking over that list, I got to wondering: Why was Jetpack Joyride retaining 43.56MB of files? And what was Flixster doing with 22.97MB? Facebook alone was sucking up 74MB. So I clicked the Detail button for that category, revealing a lengthy list of pretty much every app installed on my phone. Most of this was found in "Cache and Off-line Files," which gave me pause. Here's what PhoneClean found on my iPhone 4S.Īfter a scan lasting several minutes (the developer reports that this version is actually slower because it scans deeper into iOS), PhoneClean reported it could free up around 840MB of space on my iPhone 4S. In version 2.0 (which has a redesigned UI and is also available for Mac), the program lets you review each and every item it finds and decide whether or not you want to delete it. PhoneClean scours internal memory in search of temp files, cached and offline files, cookies, script files, and "other" junk, which can get left behind by failed iTunes syncs. And regardless of how much storage you have, if you're running out of it, any extra space you can free up is welcome indeed. Of course, if your device has only 16GB or even 8GB of storage, that might be a big deal. And you know what? It works, though don't expect miracles - at best you might reclaim around a gigabyte of space. However, Matt wasn't willing to subject his iPhone 4S to PhoneClean's mysterious ministrations, only his iPad.Īs the braver, dumber, blogger, I decided to let the newly updated PhoneClean 2.0 do its thing on my iPhone 4S. ![]() The utility provides a "digital colonic" (Matt's words), cleansing any iOS device of useless and unnecessary files that might be consuming valuable space. Last summer, CNET's Matthew Elliott took iMobie's PhoneClean for a test drive. Feeling the storage crunch on your iPhone, iPod Touch, or iPad? A free utility may be able to help. ![]()
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