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Mike Sweeney over at Packetattack sent us this back: "What has impressed me is the new found stability of my XP test box. And here I thought memory management add-ons died in the late 80s ;) Long Live QEMM ;) Honestly, so far I'm impressed with AutoPilot. I have the Google folding protein app running in the background at 50% and along with my normal day to day stuff such VMware, Bloomba and various browsers, everything works together now. Go figure."
I'd like to add something here as the owner of AutoPilot. This product has an interesting history. The concept was originally developed for Cray systems that needed CPU load balancing code. Then that code was ported to generic Unix systems, and later the same concept was rewritten for the NT code base. It's really more than just memory management: AutoPilot looks at all the bottlenecks in your system (can look straight into the CPU(s) bypassing the hardware abstraction layer) and then when your box gets busy, instructs the OS to use more threads and resources for the jobs that need it. AutoPilot is really a neural network, and you could see it as an "intelligence booster" for the OS that can result in better performance. Try it out for yourself at this link. (It works fine with the new SP2 by the way.)
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