Jeff, you are probably correct but I copied a portion of the file that was
the content for a video from Microsoft on using Powershell and it worked well
for him so I don't know. But thanks for the reply.
Patrick
10. Collecting Windows System Assessment Tool data from the command line.
The Windows System Assessment Tool (WSAT) provides numeric ratings (1= bad,
5=good) of system performance for processor, disk, graphics, etc so you can
get a summary and potential solutions for improving performance. Because this
data is stored in WMI, Windows PowerShell can programmatically collect this
data from multiple computers and allow you to quickly evaluate the health of
a set of machines without having to log in to each one. Here is a command to
get WSAT data from a single Vista machine and format it in a nice, auto-sized
table for viewing. Also an example of a PowerGadgets chart.
PS> get-wmiobject win32_winsat | format-table __SERVER, *SCORE -autosize
PS> get-wmiobject win32_winsat | select *score | out-chart -Title "System
Assessment Scores by PowerGadgets"
"Jeff" wrote:
> On Aug 10, 9:04 am, Patrick R. <Patri...@discussions.microsoft.com>
> wrote:
> > The term 'out-chart' is not recognized as a cmd
> > again.
> > At line:1 char:39
> > + get-wmiobject win32_winstat | out-chart <<<<
>
> Out-Chart isn't a built-in PowerShell cmdlet... It comes with
> PowerGadgets(http://www.powergadgets.com/), I believe. Do you have
> PowerGadgets installed?
>
> Jeff
>
>