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Movies & TV Music Business & Education Business Students & educators event viewer windows xp Developers Sale Sale Find a store Gift cards Products Software & services Windows Office Free downloads & security Internet http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;308427&Product Explorer Microsoft Edge Skype OneNote OneDrive Microsoft Health MSN Bing Microsoft Groove Microsoft Movies & TV Devices & Xbox All Microsoft devices Microsoft Surface All Windows PCs & tablets PC accessories Xbox & games Microsoft Lumia All http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;308427&Product Windows phones Microsoft HoloLens For business Cloud Platform Microsoft Azure Microsoft Dynamics Windows for business Office for business Skype for business Surface for business Enterprise solutions Small business solutions Find a solutions provider Volume Licensing For developers & IT pros Develop Windows apps Microsoft Azure MSDN TechNet Visual Studio For students & educators Office for students OneNote in classroom Shop PCs & tablets perfect for students Microsoft in Education Support Sign in Cart Cart Javascript is disabled Please enable javascript and refresh the page Cookies are disabled Please enable cookies and refresh the page CV: {{ getCv() }} English (United States) Terms of use Privacy & cookies Trademarks © 2016 Microsoft
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With Windows 10's "CompactOS" Subscribe l l FOLLOW US TWITTER GOOGLE+ FACEBOOK GET UPDATES BY EMAIL Enter your email below to get exclusive access to our best articles and tips before everybody else. RSS ALL ARTICLES FEATURES ONLY TRIVIA Search How-To Geek What Is the Windows Event Viewer, and How Can I Use It? The Windows Event Viewer shows a log of application and system messages – errors, information messages, and warnings. Scammers have used the Event Viewer to deceive people – event a properly functioning system will have error messages here. In one infamous scam, a person claiming to be from Microsoft phones someone up and instructs them to open the Event Viewer. The person is sure to see error messages here, and the scammer will ask for the person’s credit card number to fix them. As a rule of thumb, you can generally ignore all of the errors and warnings that appear in the Event Viewer – assuming your computer is working properly. Launching the Event Viewer To launch the Event Viewer, just type Event Viewer into your Start menu and press Enter. You can also launch the Event Viewer from the Administrative Tools folder. Events are placed in different categories. For example, the Application log contains a log of application events and the System log contains a log of Windows system events. Don’t Panic! You’re sure to see some errors and warnings in the Event Viewer, even if your computer is working fine. The Event Viewer is designed to help system administrators keep tabs on their computers and troubleshoot problems. If there isn’t a problem with your computer, the errors in here are unlikely to be important. For example, you’ll often see errors that indicate a program crashed at a specific time, which may have been weeks ago. Even warnings are often unimportant to the average user. If you’re trying to troubleshoot a problem with your server, these warnings may be helpful. If you’re not, they’re not particularly useful. In theory, other applications