MemMaid is the only tool you will ever need to manage your Pocket PC's memory.
Cleaner
The cleaner lets you clean all the left-over files and registry entries that consume your Pocket PC's memory. Removing those files or registry saves you a large amount of memory and gives you more privacy.
Notification Queue
The notification queue is a queue of items coming from your appointments and calendar as well as programs that are activated on certain system events.
Take control of this queue and remove all un-wanted items. Tap on "FindDuplicate" to detect any duplicates in the queue or even select the un-wanted item and tap on delete to remove them.
StartUps
StartUp programs:
Check what programs will run with each SoftReset
Get more information about each one
Remove unwanted items
Add your own programs
Control the order they are executed
StartUp services:
Check what services will run with each SoftReset
Get more information about each one
Remove unwanted entries (if they can be removed)
Today Plugins:
Check what plugin are installed in your device
Get more information about each one
Change the plugins display order
Display/Change plugin options (if possible)
Delete Plugin entries (this is not uninstall)
Tweaks
Memory tweaks:
Select where you want PIE to store its cache.
Change the size limit of your PIE cache
Take control of the Font Cache Size
Select where you want AvantGo to store its cache
Storage Memory
Storage Usage:
See where your storage memory is consumed, explore those directories using the system file explorer (or your own custom explorer) or compare the directories size using MemMaid's charts.
Find File:
Search your storage memory using this powerful search engine. You can search for files using their names (wild cards allowed) and/or file sizes.
Databases:
List the databases created on your system and get more information about them. You can even delete unwanted databases.
Running Processes
Some programs are taking few kilobytes in your storage, but is allocating a lot of memory.
This dialog shows how much memory that every running program is allocating