Using Reliability Monitor, a tool the the boys of Redmond hid in Vista

A

Adam Albright

One of my pet peeves is Microsoft treats ALL it's customers as
blithering idiots and in effect tries to protect users from themselves
by hiding built-in features that can be useful in troubleshooting. I
hate that!

I've mentioned Task Manager and Resource Monitor many times in various
threads from which you can learn a lot of what Vista is doing behind
the scenes. Did you know you can go a lot further?

Click on Start and type in 'relia' for Reliability Monitor.

How about that! A new tool that was there all along if only you knew
how to turn it on. OK, why would you want to use this tool?

To track what goes wrong and perhaps get a better understand why.

If you typed in 'relia' a new window should pop up, expand Monitoring
tools in the left pane and go full screen so you can see details more
clearly. Click on Reliability Monitor and you'll see something you
haven't before... a plotted line chart of your system's reliability.
At the extreme top right you can select a day to get a closer look
starting at that date.

Now when you have some time, just play around looking for low plotted
points on the chart. To see them all you need to move backwards in
time by changing the calendar to earlier dates.

Example: for me 5/26/07 was a "bad" day. I know that not from trusting
my memory or reading notes, but by clicking on the tick on the chart
that Vista was keeping for me. When I did a whole bunch of data popped
up under applications failures.

Other things show up on the chart too. There are five categories:
Software installs which include driver changes and Windows updates,
applications failures, the more important hardware failures, Windows
failures and everything else lumped under Miscellaneous failures.

Why should you care? Because this can help you troubleshoot problems
when your system is sluggish or not running right or is always
crashing. Similar to the "ranking" you get for your installed hardware
this chart shows an index number for how reliable your install of
Vista is behaving. Higher ticks on the chart show a higher index value
at that point in time reflecting a more stable system, lower values
point to problems, so it is easy to go all the way back to when you
installed Vista or when some problem started happening by just
changing the date on the calendar at the top of this window then walk
through the chart looking for "problems" by checking for low points on
the chart and the familiar keys of red "x's", yellow ! or information
markers like is used in Device Manager.

Tip: To get a quick idea how stable your system has been according to
Vista, begin by selecting "show all" then look at the details under
each of the five categories I mentioned above.

Another place to look for help is in Control Panel. Click on Problem
Reports and you can get a detailed problem report history by
application.

By combining what Reliability Monitor logs, what is logged in Events
and is detailed in problem reports you are further along in finding
out what is causing Vista problems.
 
F

Fyvush Finkel

Waaaayyyy COOL. Thanks for the tip. I love the ability to see when
software and updates were install. A great debugging tool.
 
T

Tom Allen

Adam Albright said:
One of my pet peeves is Microsoft treats ALL it's customers as
blithering idiots and in effect tries to protect users from themselves
by hiding built-in features that can be useful in troubleshooting. I
hate that!
Click on Start and type in 'relia' for Reliability Monitor.
How about that! A new tool that was there all along if only you knew
how to turn it on.

Hidden features ?
I just looked in Programs - Administrative tools,
also in Control Panel - System and maintenance.

Tom
 
F

Frank

Tom said:
Hidden features ?
I just looked in Programs - Administrative tools,
also in Control Panel - System and maintenance.

Tom
In Ultimate, it's not hidden, it's in Administrative tools.
Frank
 
A

Adam Albright

Hidden features ?
I just looked in Programs - Administrative tools,
also in Control Panel - System and maintenance.

Tom
You don't think putting it in Control Panel is hiding? I do.
 
A

Adam Albright

Yes... if you're blind drunk.

Just poor design. Things Microsoft don't really want you to use they
HIDE in Control Panel. I see all the moronic fanboys stick together.
 
J

Julian

Adam Albright said:
Just poor design. Things Microsoft don't really want you to use they
HIDE in Control Panel. I see all the moronic fanboys stick together.

Get a life.

How on earth are they supposed to make every possible function
immediately obvious? 99% of users aren't interested in such details.
A little knowledge, such as you have, is a dangerous thing.

Hic!
 
A

Adam Albright

Get a life.

How on earth are they supposed to make every possible function
immediately obvious? 99% of users aren't interested in such details.
A little knowledge, such as you have, is a dangerous thing.

Hic!

Like I said, moronic fanboys. I forgot more than you idiots will ever
know.
 
F

Frank

Adam said:
Like I said, moronic fanboys. I forgot more than you idiots will ever
know.

You drunken fool, now you're trying to pretend that you know something
about computers AND trying to act like you have some intelligent!

ROTFLMAO!!!
Frank
 
A

Adam Albright

You drunken fool, now you're trying to pretend that you know something
about computers AND trying to act like you have some intelligent!

Sorry Frank, but you are known as the biggest fool in the newsgroup.
You run a business? Sure, and I'm the king of England.
 
R

Ronnie Vernon MVP

Tom Allen said:
Hidden features ?
I just looked in Programs - Administrative tools,
also in Control Panel - System and maintenance.

Tom

As well as several other places in Control Panel under Advanced Tools.
Not to mention if you look in Help and Support and search for Troubleshoot,
Diagnostic, Diagnose, Performance, Monitor, Tools, etc.

I guess Adam must have just discovered these tools and needs to blame
someone. :)
 
A

Adam Albright

As well as several other places in Control Panel under Advanced Tools.
Not to mention if you look in Help and Support and search for Troubleshoot,
Diagnostic, Diagnose, Performance, Monitor, Tools, etc.

I guess Adam must have just discovered these tools and needs to blame
someone. :)

No hardly. I know the average user doesn't go sniffing around in
Control Panel. I do of course get endless enjoyment watching Microsoft
apologists dance and make silly excuses for all the bugs in Vista and
all the lame design decisions. Five years to develop this? That is a
joke.
 
L

Lang Murphy

Adam Albright said:
No hardly. I know the average user doesn't go sniffing around in
Control Panel. I do of course get endless enjoyment watching Microsoft
apologists dance and make silly excuses for all the bugs in Vista and
all the lame design decisions. Five years to develop this? That is a
joke.


C'mon... you can't have it both ways... either you're an experienced user or
you're not. Since you proclaim yourself to be an advanced user who knows
everything there is to know about everything, one must question your sudden
reference to "...the average user..." and how that makes the folks
responding to your post "...Microsoft apologists...". Odd.

Lang
 
G

Guest

Adam Albright said:
Just poor design. Things Microsoft don't really want you to use they
HIDE in Control Panel. I see all the moronic fanboys stick together.

Hiding in the control panel?
That's like hiding in plan site and it hardly makes anyone moronic becasue
they knew it was there.

I think it make you moronic for thinking the control panel is a hiding place.
Talk about moronic
Adam meet Alias two peas in a .....
 
A

Adam Albright

Hiding in the control panel?
That's like hiding in plan site and it hardly makes anyone moronic becasue
they knew it was there.

I think it make you moronic for thinking the control panel is a hiding place.
Talk about moronic
Adam meet Alias two peas in a ....

I couldn't care less what moronic fanboys think. I'm here to help
people that actually want help, not argue with dimwits more worried
about defending Microsoft's poor decisions or obsessed with trying to
winning one endless pissing contest after another.

I stand by what I said.

I said hid because even when you go to Control Panel there is no
direct link to Reliability Monitor, you first have to click on
Administrative tools to find it. That you can also get to it other
ways isn't the issue either. Nor is that I said it was hidden. The
point that zooms over the heads of the fanboy crowd is I was the first
to explain how to find the tool and how to use it. NONE OF YOU DID now
did you. Of course not, you're too busy kissing Microsoft's ass.
 

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