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Coreprio is a free, open-source Windows utility published by Bitsum that targets a very specific hardware niche: systems built around AMD’s 32-core Ryzen Threadripper 2990WX or 24-core 2970WX processors. Designed solely as a CPU-optimization tool, the program delivers two distinct performance-oriented features. The first is Bitsum’s own implementation of AMD’s “Dynamic Local Mode,” a scheduler-level algorithm that automatically migrates the most active threads to the CPU cores that have direct access to local memory, thereby reducing the latency penalties that these particular “WX” chips can suffer when threads are stranded on compute dies lacking attached DRAM. The second capability, labeled “NUMA Dissociater,” is a Bitsum innovation that experimentally modifies how Windows assigns logical processors to NUMA nodes, aiming to further alleviate the non-uniform memory access bottlenecks that limit throughput in heavily threaded workloads. Together the features seek to raise frame rates in games, cut render times in content-creation suites, and smooth any task whose performance collapses when threads bounce across NUMA boundaries. Because the underlying issues are architectural, gains vary from application to application, but users who run concurrent benchmarks commonly report single-digit to low-double-digit percentage improvements. The entire utility is lightweight, portable, and requires no persistent background service once its settings are applied. Version 0.0.6.8, the only public release to date, remains under active maintenance, and its MIT-licensed source code is hosted openly for community review. Coreprio is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always providing the latest build and supporting batch installation alongside other applications.
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