This is a powergadget snap-in that has to be installed separately from
powershell.
The code you provided eludes this this (ever so vaguely)
get-wmiobject win32_winsat | select *score | out-chart -Title "System
Assessment Scores by PowerGadgets"
"Patrick R." <PatrickR@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:F249F8A3-293B-4FB8-94D8-5AC9FFE0E2CF@microsoft.com...
> 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
>>
>>