How to View Your Reliability History in Windows 11/10 [Tutorial]

How to View Your Reliability History in Windows 11/10 [Tutorial]

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How to View Your Reliability History in Windows 11/10 [Tutorial]

Reliability Monitor is an advanced tool that provides a system stability overview and details about events that impact reliability. It calculates the Stability Index shown in the System Stability Chart over the lifetime of the system.

Based on data collected over the lifetime of the system, each date in the System Stability Chart includes a graph point showing that day’s System Stability Index rating. The System Stability Index is a number from 1 (least stable) to 10 (most stable) and is a weighted measurement derived from the number of specified failures seen over a rolling historical period. Reliability Events in the System Stability Report describe the specific failures.
Recent failures are weighted more heavily than past failures, allowing an improvement over time to be reflected in an ascending System Stability Index once a reliability issue has been resolved.

Days when the system is powered off or in a sleep state are not used when calculating the System Stability Index.

If there is not enough data to calculate a steady System Stability Index, the graphed line will be dotted. When enough data has been recorded to generate a steady System Stability Index, the graphed line will be solid.

If there are any significant changes to the system time, an Information icon will appear on the graph for each day on which the system time was adjusted.

Reliability Monitor maintains up to a year of history for system stability and reliability events. The System Stability Chart displays a rolling graph organized by date.

The top half of the System Stability Chart displays a graph of the Stability Index. In the lower half of the chart, five rows track Reliability Events that either contribute to the stability measurement for the system or provide related information about software installation and removal. When one or more Reliability Events of each type are detected, an icon appears in the column for that date.

Issues addressed in this tutorial:
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Despite Microsoft’s best efforts, Windows 10 isn’t immune to crashes and freezes. Often, it’s not even the result of Windows itself, but a program or driver you have installed. Finding what exactly caused the crash or freeze can be difficult, however, which is where the Windows 10 Reliability Monitor comes in.

Computer issues will occur sooner or later on your PC. Fixing those problems isn’t always a simple task, but there’s one Windows tool that can help you.

If you want to check reliability history on Windows 11/10, today we’re going to show you how to use Reliability Monitor.

This tutorial will apply for computers, laptops, desktops, and tablets running the Windows 10 and Windows 11 operating systems (Home, Professional, Enterprise, Education) from all supported hardware manufactures, like Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Toshiba, Lenovo, Alienware, Razer, MSI, Huawei , Microsoft Surface, and Samsung.

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