Itâs a sad truth, but you do need an antivirus to securely use Android these days. Google Play is teeming with beautiful and interesting apps, but it also has its fair share of bad apples seeking to misuse your personal data, drain your battery life, or be malicious in other creative and surprising ways. Fortunately, thereâs no lack of high-quality antivirus apps: Weâve previously looked at three of the best antivirus apps (Kaspersky, Lookout, and F-Secure), and also reviewed Lookout on its own. Today Iâm here to look at another p roduct that strives not only to protect you from viruses, but actually make your phone or tablet faster: Advanced Mobile Care.
Before we get started, full disclosure: IObit, the company who makes Advanced Mobile Care, also offers some of its software via MakeUseOf Rewards. This is not, however, a sponsored review. With over half a million Google Play downloads and a 4.7-star average coming from over 6,100 reviews, Advanced Mobile Care is impressive enough to review in its own right.
Initial Impressions and Getting Started
When you first launch Advanced Mobile Care, it starts you off with a quick three-screen tour (also known as an âonboardingâ). This sets the visual tone for the app, which is generally blue and glow-y:
Many people look at their smartphones and tablets as entertainment devices, and it looks like IObit decided the app should take this notion and run with it. It also stresses simplicity:
Thatâs the main screen, with a very clear âfirst actionâ youâre supposed to take. But since Iâm an inquisitive type, I hit the menu button before scanning just to see what happens:
IObit eschews the traditional Android text-only menu for a more visual option. The colorful ribbons with the stars confused me, though; At first I thought they indicate sneaky âPremium featuresâ for paid users, something IObit doesnât hint at in the Google Play page. Turns out I was wrong: These features are just as free as the rest. I guess these are the ones IObit wants me to use or notice first. Interesting, since they seem to be randomly sprinkled in with the others.
Whatâs Included
Now would be a good time to list out everything Advanced Mobile Care tries to do with a quick explanation of whatâs what:
- Antivirus: Also scans apps as you install them.
- Game Speeder: A feature that purports to make your games run faster by killing tasks before you launch a game.
- App Manager: Lets you uninstall apps, sort-of in bulk (not really, though).
- Battery Saver: A bit like a built-in JuiceDefender for cutting down on power-draining activities.
- Task Kille r: A downright irresponsible addition to the suite if you ask me. Android really doesnât need a task killer to work correctly.
- Privacy Advisor: Scans your apps and summarizes the permissions they require.
- Privacy Locker: Safeguards your images and such behind a code. Still doesnât make taking risqué photos with your phone a good idea.
- Invite Friends: For spreading and recommending the app.
- Cloud Backup: Only for contacts and call logs. Requires an account; only useful if you donât sync your contacts with Googleâs servers.
This isnât a manual, so I wonât be looking at all of these, just a few that piqued my interest.
App Manager
The App Manager has sever al parts, with the uninstaller being just one. Thatâs the interesting bit, to me, so thatâs what you can see above. It lets you checkmark several apps for bulk removal; but when you tap the Uninstall button, it doesnât really remove them in bulk (like Titanium Backup does); rather, it triggers Androidâs native uninstaller for each app separately, making you confirm each individual app. So, this saves a little bit of time, but not much.
More important, the uninstaller wonât let you sort apps by installation date, which is often the most useful way to track down apps you want to remove (mainly recently installed apps you realize youâre not actually using).
Privacy Advisor
The Privacy Advisor greets yo u with a quick explanation, alongside a hooded character that bears a striking resemblance to the guy you see on the top-left of a Chrome Incognito window. It then scans your apps, literally:
While the scan is running, icons for your apps slowly scroll down what looks like an armored window, with a laser running over them. Clear, amusing, and visual â" Iâm sure some users would scan their apps just for fun. Once done, you get a page with scan results, which are basically a list of Android system permissions showing how many apps require each:
Tap a permission, and get a list of all apps that require it:
You can now mark one or more apps and quickly remove them.
Game Speeder
Game Speeder tries to make games faster by killing apps before you launch a game. After a quick explanation slide, it aggregates games on your system to a single launch screen:
Yes, Iâm not much of a gamer, and the games I do play donât pose a challenge to my Galaxy S IIIâs capabilities. When you tap a game, it literally launches it:
While Game Speeder sets your system up to run the game, you get an amusing animation showing the game launching. I like it because of how literal it is â" just like the âscanningâ animation.
I can tell you that Angry Birds Space didnât run less well when launched through Game Speeder. I really canât say it was any better, though. If youâre mainly a Sudoku kind of guy, youâre not going to get much out of this feature â" but if you play graphically-intensive games on a previous-generation device, Iâd love to hear if Game Speeder did anything for you in the comments.
Scan Results
I wonât dive deep into Mobile Careâs scanner, because frankly, itâs not all that unique. Hereâs the scan results screen:
I find this screen needlessly alarmist; it makes it seem like somethingâs wrong with the device (all of that scary color, and no less than 156 âjunk filesâ!), when really, things are just peachy:
Itâs interesting Mobile Care puts Browser History under âJunk Filesâ and marks it for deletion by default. I understand why it wants to delete gallery thumbnails by default, but browser history? It almost feels like itâs there just to inflate the number of items found (because people like it when their security scanner finds things â" they think it means itâs being efficient).
Still, the scan itself doesnât do any harm, and IObit isnât kno wn for missing known threats. I just wish it didnât feel like it was trying hard to find something, anything, just to prove itself worthy.
Final Thoughts
Mobile Careâs strategy is clear: Try to do a lot while staying pretty. Well, the looks work, at least for me. This is an attractive app, and the layout is sensible and consistent. Animations, while pretty, donât feel gratuitous and actually help communicate what the app is doing in a non-technical way. Some of the tools offered are interesting and valuable (The Privacy Scanner makes permissions very clear), while others feel almost irresponsible (Task Killer). So in that department, Mobile Care is a bit of a mixed bag. Still, if you donât go crazy with it, it makes for a valuable mobile security tool thatâs also fun to use.
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