That's a great question. Think of adaptive network control like a smart traffic cop for your internet. It also observed your connection at all times and made adjustments in real time, instead of merely allowing all the apps to drive as briskly as they wished and cause a tremendous traffic jam.
The following is the way it can actually aid in the real world:
Priorities What Matters: When you have a large game update running in the background, as you are on a Zoom call, it understands that the video call is more important. It will throttle the download rate a notch lower to ensure that the video does not lag or become frozen.
Smooths Out Spikes: It automatically regulates bandwidth by moving resources where they are required most within one second eliminating that irritating "buffering" wheel.
Works Everywhere: To use at home, it leaves your Netflix stream without buffering as another person plays a game. To businesses, it guarantees that vital business applications remain quick when all the office is up.
It is, in a nutshell, the guesswork removed out of controlling your router and it ensures that your connection remains stable and you do not need to touch a single setting!