Super Memory Cleaner runs in the Menu Bar and shows you the current amount of free memory that is available at one quick glance. The amount is accurate and the same as reported by Activity Monitor.
Click the memory value displayed by Super Memory Cleaner in the Menu Bar, and you’ll see a memory usage meter that closely resembles the fuel meter from a car’s dashboard. Anything in the red range means you’re dangerously low on memory, with zero indicating running out of it. Click the broomstick button to force Super Memory Cleaner to free up any available memory that it can.
Super Memory Cleaner’s Menu Bar status changes to ‘Cleaning’ while it frees up memory. If you open Activity Monitor as well, you will see a drastic drop in free memory but once Super Memory Cleaner is done cleaning, the amount of free memory will increase. Memory might fall down to as low as 5MB during the clean up process, which can take up to three minutes. Though once it’s done, the final free memory amount will have increased.
We tested Super Memory Cleaner with only four apps running: the Mac App Store, Google Chrome, Activity Monitor, and Finder. Chrome had been running all day but had only six tabs open in it. Activity Monitor and Super Memory Cleaner both reported 1.75GB of free memory initially but after the cleaning process, Super Memory Cleaner was able to hike up the free memory to 2.2 GB.
Super Memory Cleaner’s Preference console allow you to start the app automatically at login, and enable it to Auto-clean at periodic intervals. Though the intervals are preset in the app, and you can’t specify a custom one.
Super Memory Cleaner can prove to be quite useful if you’re running memory-hungry apps like image or video editors. The interface is nice enough too, and should be easy to understand for anyone.
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