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Post by Admin_Vistamike on Dec 28, 2015 13:03:37 GMT
Troubleshooting problems in Windows can be kind of a pain, but the built-in Reliability Monitor gives you a leg up by presenting your computer’s reliability and problem history in one easy view.
Reliability Monitor is one of those awesome Windows features that few people know about or bother with. But it’s incredibly useful. Windows tracks application and system failures automatically and, though it’s the same information you can see using the venerable Event Viewer, Reliability Monitor presents these failures in an easy-to-browse time-based view.Troubleshooting problems in Windows can be kind of a pain, but the built-in Reliability Monitor gives you a leg up by presenting your computer’s reliability and problem history in one easy view.
To start Reliability Monitor, click Start, type ‘reliability,’ and then choose View Reliability History. The first thing you’ll see is a chart showing your computer’s reliability history over the last two or so weeks. You can scroll the chart backward or forward in time with the arrows at the left and right, and you can view the chart by weeks instead of days. There’s a lot going on in this chart, so first let’s break it down a bit.
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Hope you might find this useful
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Post by raphoenix on Dec 28, 2015 22:43:46 GMT
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Post by raphoenix on Dec 31, 2015 13:32:28 GMT
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