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What it does
System Report collects everything TuneBit knows about your machine and stitches it into one readable HTML document. Unlike Windows' built-in msinfo32 (which is dense, slow, and hard to share), the TuneBit report is organized by topic, skips the irrelevant technical noise, and can be saved as a file or copied straight to the clipboard.
What you can include
Twelve sections can be turned on or off with checkboxes before you generate the report. Most are on by default; a few are off by default because they contain sensitive information.
- System Overview — OS version, build, computer name, user, uptime.
- Hardware Summary — CPU, motherboard, installed RAM, GPU.
- Security Posture — firewall, Defender, UAC, Secure Boot, BitLocker status.
- Storage — every drive's size, free space, file system, and SMART health.
- Network — IP addresses, DNS servers, adapters, public IP.
- Installed Programs — everything in Programs and Features, with install dates.
- Startup Programs — what launches at boot.
- Running Services — which Windows services are currently running.
- Recent BSODs — STOP code and date of recent Blue Screens.
- Product Keys — Windows and Office keys. Off by default.
- WiFi Passwords — saved WiFi network passwords. Off by default.
- Driver Issues — missing, unsigned, or outdated drivers.
How to use it
- Go to Info → System Report.
- Tick or untick sections based on what you want in the report.
- Click Generate Report. Collecting the data takes 10–30 seconds depending on what you selected.
- Preview the report in the built-in viewer. Scroll through to confirm it looks right.
- Click Save as HTML for the pretty version, Save as Text for a plain-text copy, or Copy to Clipboard to paste into an email or chat.
When you'd use it
- A family member is helping you fix something remotely — send them the report so they know what they're working with.
- You're shopping for an upgrade and need a reminder of exactly what CPU, RAM, and motherboard are in the box.
- You're planning a clean reinstall and want a record of installed software and product keys to refer to after.
- You're documenting a fleet of PCs at a small business.
Be careful who sees the "sensitive" sections. Product keys and WiFi passwords are valuable — don't post the full report on a public forum. If you're sharing for help, untick those sections first. You can always generate a second report for your own records.
Before a big upgrade or reinstall, generate a full report and save it somewhere outside your PC (cloud drive, email to yourself, printed). It's the single best "I'll wish I had this later" artifact.