To me this seems somewhat pointless.  If you are going to test your
app on a less powerful machine, than just do that, don't try to
recreate those kind of conditions by relying on a program that will
"downgrade" your system.  It seems there would be too many things to
consider that may be beyond the scope of the OP or anyone else to get
any meaningful benchmarks from this sort of test.

On Sep 24, 3:30 am, CK <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I thought you were talking about Windows for a moment, so was going to
> get my heat shield ready for the ensuing flame war...
>
> It should be fairly easy to build a simple console app that loads up a
> few large files and continually reads through them, that should cover
> RAM, IO and CPU slow-down.
>
> On 22 Sep, 19:42, John Davies <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Years ago, I used a program from MS that I think was called Bloat.
>
> > The program could eat up RAM or CPU cycles to make it easier to test a
> > program under development to see how it would work on a lesser
> > machine.
>
> > I'm looking for a similar program that is available today, but so far
> > have not had any luck.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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