Your Windows Experience Index Needs To Be Refreshed
- Your Windows Experience Index Needs To Be Refreshed By Jesus
- Your Windows Experience Index Needs To Be Refreshed By God
When Windows Vista boots for the first time, it tests all of the components and assigns the initial scores. The scores are stored here: C: windows Performance WinSAT DataStore. Every time you refresh your rating, the new ratings are stored in that folder, labeled with the date. These are XML files that you can open and look at if you'd like.
RECOMMENDED:Windows Experience Index (WEI), one of the hundreds of features introduced with Windows Vista, is designed to help you better understand your computer’s capabilities. It scans your computer hardware and assigns it a score after running a number of tests. These ratings help users in purchasing software and games.For instance, a base score of 5.2 means that the PC will run an application or a game if the WEI score of the game or application is less than, or equal to 5.2. Windows Experience Index in Windows 8.1In Vista, Windows 7 and Windows 8, could be accessed by right-clicking on the Computer icon and then clicking Properties. However, in Windows 8.1 Microsoft has partially dropped this feature and it doesn’t appear in Computer Properties. Even though most users don’t refer to the base score of WEI before installing software and hence will not miss this feature in Windows 8.1, some users who refer to WEI score might want to know how to get back the feature or at least how to check Windows Experience Index ratings in Windows 8.1.As we mentioned already, there is no perfect workaround to add WEI to Computer Properties. However, since Microsoft hasn’t completely removed this feature from Windows 8.1, there is a way to check WEI score.UPDATE: We recommend you check out our guide to know all three free tools out there to get the missing feature in Windows 8.1.Update: If you’re on Windows 10, please check out guide.Method 1:Step 1: Head over to and download ChrisPC Win Experience Index software.
Your Windows Experience Index Needs To Be Refreshed By Jesus
None of what Tyran posted works for my 8.1. Ram & CPU is there inherently, but no WEI is shown.‘C:WINDOWSsystem32winsat formal’ shows lots of output, but the only thing in it that resemblesa WEI like number is in the last 3 lines Video Memory Throughput 3416.99 MB/s Dshow Video Encode Time 2.53239 s Media Foundation Decode Time 0.10644 s Disk Sequential 64.0 Read 480.45 MB/s 8.1 Disk Random 16.0 Read 227.45 MB/s 7.9 Total Run Time 00:02:15.77Does this mean my WEI is 8.1 or 7.9 or neither? Did I miss something?.tyran says. I don’t get it man. I always get a score of 5.9 because of my hard drive always getting 5.9, My GPU a R9 270 gets 8.4 and the old i5 750 quad cpu gets 7.4, and the 8GB Ripjaw 1600 DDR3 gets 7.7, But yet my HDD gets. I don’t understand anyway why the speed of a HDD makes any difference in gaming. A old sata 7200 RPM is more than sufficient for any game with any gaming rig.
Your Windows Experience Index Needs To Be Refreshed By God
Even the older 5400 RPM HDD is fine for gaming. I understand the windows experience score is pointless anyway. But still who rates a computers gaming performance on the type of hard drive? That’s ridiculous.kentt says.