If you’ve been holed up at home, one of the things you might not have thought of is to improve your computer’s performance. Just like a car, periodic maintenance can improve the user experience. And, wouldn’t you know, there’s a company that can help – Voosh.
Voosh will be formerly released Wednesday 7/22; but I’ve been using it for a week now, and I can relate some positive results from my experience.
Voosh Performance
In a nutshell, big companies spend thousands of dollars each year optimizing processors, servers, networks, etc., just to keep their companies humming at top speed. Well now, the engineers at Voosh have analyzed those processes and using AI, they’ve created what they call Active Continuous Optimization (ACO for short).
In plain English, that means that their software monitors your computer every half hour or so and tweaks the settings until your computer starts and runs as fast as possible.
Presently, it only works on Windows, but an iOS version is slated for later this year. You pay only as you use it – $9.97 per month or $44.97 per year.
The genius of this program is that nothing changes permanently, so if you decide you don’t think it is enough of an improvement, simply stop paying for it, and everything will be reset as it was before.
Here’s what I experienced:
The install is super simple. Download the program, run the executable file and reboot. That’s basically it. No complicated questions or settings you need to select. The program does it all.
The program also has a dashboard so you can monitor its progress, and because it relies on AI, the longer it runs, the better it can tweak your system.
When I first installed it, here was the immediate result.
Network speeds also increased
But, after a week, that initial 36.3% improvement was up to 61.0%
That’s pretty impressive!
I was pleasantly surprised to see how effortless that was for such a marked improvement. You too can try it out for a week – for free – right here: Try a free week of Voosh Performance on up to five computers.
Disclosure: Voost provided copies of this software to enable us to do this review. Opinions are and always will be totally our own.
Stock photo by chuttersnap on Unsplash