System Information Viewer is a small but powerful application that displays information regarding your computer's hardware and software. It basically offers you access to fully change the Windows behavior, according to your preferences.
Once you have installed the application, it will place itself in the system tray, so you have quick access to all its functions. The main interface of the program is standard - it consists of a single window and a bunch of buttons.
System Information Viewer offers detailed information about your system - Windows, machine, sensors, USB Bus, network, SPD, volumes, Wi-Fi and PCI Bus. So, this tool is designed for power users only.
You can view data about resource usage, processors, volts, temperature, power, memory, CPU and GPU (available and utilized), Cache-0 Latency, as well as others.
But you can also view what applications and services run at startup, what are your system's base DLL files, what font families you have installed, view a code pages, access the registry editor etc.
Furthermore, you can tune Windows (e.g. disable firewall notifications, override firewall, disable updates alerts) and the system (e.g. disable Task Manager, enable shutdown without logon, set screensaver grace period), and more.
Any piece of information provided by System Information Viewer can be copied, and you can also access a very extensive help file if you don't understand some technical terms.
But System Information Viewer uses a low amount of system memory, it doesn't freeze or crash, and the level of detailed information it offers is extraordinary. We definitely recommend it to hardcore users.
What's New in This Release:
· Updated Windows 8.1 support and enabled ACPI evaluation for Build 9431.
· Added support for the Intel WX58BP motherboard, HP DL580 G5 system and resloved issue with SMBIOS/DMI reporting.
· Added support to report Pipe Usage for UAS (USB Attached SCSI) capable devices.
· Resolved issue with [ MCH ] on some systems with a VIA chipset.
· Resolved issue with logo backgrounds being the incorrect colour on displays with 16-bit rather than 32-bit colour.