

For e.g TXT or DOCX are saved to documents, MP3 or FLAC to the music folder, and so on. XDM places the downloaded files in different folders (Documents, Compressed, Music, Video and Programs) based on the file's extension. You can also set XDM to make your antivirus scan each downloaded file and define exceptions from the Advanced Settings. This includes selecting the download folder, maximum number of simultaneous downloads, overwrite existing files option and a few other Network, Scheduler, Password Manager options. You can configure the Xtreme Download Manager settings from the Tools menu. Either use XDM in maximized mode or use the vertical scroll-bar to navigate to the settings in the menu. Tip: The Queue menu is rather long and the toolbar on the bottom overlaps the menu.

It also has a task scheduler, which allows you to set the URLs in a queue and start/stop it at a time and date of your choice. The Downloads menu in XDM can be used to pause, resume or restart a download. There is even a batch download option which you can use for downloading multiple files at once. You can manually add a URL to download a file or add one from the clipboard. But, the File menu has a few other options. The easiest way to download files using Xtreme Download Manager is obviously to use the web browser and selecting the download option. The interface comprises a menu bar, a tab bar, a search box, a side bar and a toolbar. The GUI of Xtreme Download Manager has a dark theme with flat icons similar to Metro UI. XDM uses the Browser Monitor to capture the URLs to download the file. The extension is available on Mozilla's repository and the Chrome Web Store which means you can install it on any Firefox based or Chromium based browser. When you install Xtreme Download Manager and run it, you will see some options to install the browser add-on which is called XDM Browser Monitor.

Again, mileage varies and you don't know how beneficial (or not) a download manager is until you gave it a try. So, does using XDM make a difference? Yes, it is better than the speed that you get from your browser, and if you don't have a download manager I'd definitely recommend XDM. Forget the peak speeds, the average speed is what's important.
