Articles on: Your PC & Monitoring

How to read System Information in eclean

System Information gives you a readable overview of your PC's core hardware and Windows details. It is helpful when you need to check what machine you are using, share information with support, or compare what eclean sees with Windows.


System Information is read-only. It helps you understand the PC; it does not change hardware, drivers, or Windows settings.


How to read System Information


  1. Open System Information: Go to Your PC > System Information.
  2. Start with Overview: Review hostname, operating system, CPU, GPU, storage, memory, motherboard, and network details.
  3. Use the tabs: Open CPU, Graphics, RAM, or Storage when you need more focused information.
  4. Compare unusual values: If something looks wrong, compare it with Windows Task Manager, Device Manager, or System Information.
  5. Share details with support: If support asks, include the exact field name and value shown in eclean.


When this page is useful


  • Use it before troubleshooting performance, compatibility, or update questions.
  • Use it when support asks what CPU, GPU, RAM, storage, or Windows version you have.
  • Use it to spot missing or unexpected hardware data before checking deeper Windows tools.


Technical deep dive


System Information is an inventory view. eclean collects and displays data such as the hostname, Windows version, CPU, system architecture, installed memory, GPU, storage, network adapters, BIOS, and motherboard information.


The app reads this information from Windows-facing sources such as native system APIs, registry-backed system details, SMBIOS data, storage IOCTL calls, and GPU vendor paths when they are available. For graphics data, eclean can use NVIDIA or AMD-specific sources where supported, then fall back to broader Windows data when that is all the system exposes.


This page does not write settings, install drivers, change BIOS values, or tune hardware. If a field is missing, treat it as a data availability issue first: compare it with Windows System Information, Device Manager, Task Manager, or the hardware manufacturer's own tool before assuming the hardware is broken.

Updated on: 12/06/2026

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