by mayur khokhar
View your computer information
You can view a summary of important information
about your computer by opening System in Control Panel. You can see
basic hardware information, such as your computer's name, and which
edition of Windows your computer is running. You can change important system settings by clicking the links in the left pane of System.
-
Open System by clicking the Start button
, clicking Control Panel, clicking System and Maintenance, and then clicking System.
Hide all
System presents a summary view of basic details about your computer, including:
-
Windows edition. Lists information about the version and edition of Windows running on your computer.
-
System. Displays your computer's
Windows
Experience Index base score, which is a number that describes the
overall capability of your computer. Your computer's processor type,
speed, and quantity are listed, if your computer uses multiple
processors. For example, if your computer has two processors, you will
see (2 processors) displayed. Also displayed is how much random access
memory (RAM) is installed. For more information about your computer's
base score and what it means, see
What is the Windows Experience Index?
-
Computer name, domain, and workgroup settings.
Displays your computer's name and workgroup or domain information. You
can change this information and add user accounts by clicking Change settings.
-
The links in the left pane provide access to
additional system settings. If you're looking for the information that
you used to find in System in Control Panel when using earlier versions
of Windows, you will find that same information by clicking the links in the left pane.
-
Device Manager. Use Device Manager to change settings and update drivers.
-
Remote settings.
Change settings for Remote Desktop, which enables you to connect to a
remote computer, and Remote Assistance, which enables you to invite
someone to connect to your computer to help with a computer problem.
-
System Protection.
Manage settings that automatically create the restore points that
System Restore uses to restore your computer's system settings. You can
turn System Protection on or off for the disks on your computer, and you
can create restore points manually. For more information, search Windows Help and Support for "System Restore."
-
Advanced System Settings.
Access advanced performance, user profile, and system startup settings,
including Data Execution Prevention, which monitors programs and
reports possible security attacks. You can also change your computer's
virtual memory settings.
No comments:
Post a Comment