1. Software expanded memory managers in general offered additional, but closely related functionality. 2. EMM386 and other memory managers , however, are only used by legacy DOS programs. 3. In effect, memory managers might reverse-engineer and modify other vendors'code on the fly. 4. Your best bet might be to replace your memory manager . 5. Just as the other expanded memory managers , EMM386 uses the processor's virtual 8086 mode. 6. The interpreter included a garbage collecting memory manager , used for both string data and byte-code. 7. QEMM is far more powerful than EMM386, the standard memory manager that comes with MS-DOS. 8. The memory manager was easily controlled by the user with DOS program QEMM . COM. 9. But Savvy IBM-compatible owners have relied on better, third-party memory managers to handle this chore. 10. In MS-DOS 6.0, Microsoft introduced memory managers offered.