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Nick_H
Engaged Sweeper
Ever wondered how the PC's in your company stacks up unit against unit? A report using the Windows Experience Index is one way to find out.

The Windows Experience Index is a measurement that tells you how well your PC works with Windows and uses a base score to rate the experience you can expect. A higher base score usually means that your PC will be faster and more responsive than a PC with a lower base score.
This feature rates the performance of key hardware components such as the CPU, disk drive, and graphics card. The PC is then given a score between 1.0 and 7.9.Lists

The report below will show the average scores per organizational unit:


Select Top 1000000 tblADusers.OU,
Convert(Decimal(5,2),Avg(tblWinSAT.WinSPRLevel)) As [Base score],
Convert(Decimal(5,2),Avg(tblWinSAT.CPUScore)) As Processor,
Convert(Decimal(5,2),Avg(tblWinSAT.MemoryScore)) As [Memory (RAM)],
Convert(Decimal(5,2),Avg(tblWinSAT.GraphicsScore)) As Graphics,
Convert(Decimal(5,2),Avg(tblWinSAT.D3DScore)) As [Gaming graphics],
Convert(Decimal(5,2),Avg(tblWinSAT.DiskScore)) As [Primary hard disk]
From tblWinSAT
Inner Join tblAssets On tblAssets.AssetID = tblWinSAT.AssetId
Inner Join tblADusers On tblAssets.Username = tblADusers.Username And
tblADusers.Userdomain = tblAssets.Userdomain
Group By tblADusers.OU
Having tblADusers.OU Is Not Null And Len(RTrim(LTrim(tblADusers.OU))) > 0
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