Corrected Spelling Errors

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Thomas Raya 2019-09-27 16:28:20 -07:00 committed by GitHub
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@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
title: Using Device Health
ms.reviewer:
manager: laurawi
description: Explains how to begin usihg Device Health.
description: Explains how to begin using Device Health.
ms.prod: w10
ms.mktglfcycl: deploy
keywords: oms, operations management suite, wdav, health, log analytics
@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ Clicking a listed driver on the Driver-Induced OS Crashes blade opens a driver p
![Driver detail and history](images/driver-detail-1-sterile.png)
![Driver detail and history scrolldown](images/driver-detail-2-sterile.png)
The driver version table can help you determine whether deploying a newer version of the driver might help you reduce the crash rate. In the example shown above, the most commonly installed driver version (19.15.1.5) has a crash rate of about one-half of one percent--this is low, so this driver is probably fine. However, driver version 19.40.0.3 has a crash rate of almost 20%. If that driver had been widely deployed, updating it would substantially reduce the overal number of crashes in your organization.
The driver version table can help you determine whether deploying a newer version of the driver might help you reduce the crash rate. In the example shown above, the most commonly installed driver version (19.15.1.5) has a crash rate of about one-half of one percent--this is low, so this driver is probably fine. However, driver version 19.40.0.3 has a crash rate of almost 20%. If that driver had been widely deployed, updating it would substantially reduce the overall number of crashes in your organization.
## App Reliability
@ -207,7 +207,7 @@ The Login Health blades appear in the Device Health dashboard:
![Main Login health view](images/login-health.png)
### Login Errors
The **Login errors** blade displays data on the frequency and type of errors, with statistics on specific errors. They are generally categorized into user-generated (caused by bad input) or non-user-generated (might need IT intervention) errors. Click any individual error to see all instances of the error's occurence for the specified time period.
The **Login errors** blade displays data on the frequency and type of errors, with statistics on specific errors. They are generally categorized into user-generated (caused by bad input) or non-user-generated (might need IT intervention) errors. Click any individual error to see all instances of the error's occurrence for the specified time period.
### Login Metrics by Type
The **Login metrics by type** blade shows the success rate for your devices, as well as the success rate for other environments with a mix of operating system versions and device models similar to yours (the **Commercial average success rate**).
@ -304,7 +304,7 @@ You can run these queries from the Azure Portal **Log Search** interface (availa
### Exporting data and configuring alerts
Azure Portal enables you to export data to other tools. To do this, in any view that shows **Log Search** just click the **Export** button. Similarly, clicking the **Alert** button will enable you to run a query automaticlaly on a schedule and receive email alerts for particular query results that you set. If you have a PowerBI account, then you will also see a **PowerBI** button that enables you to run a query on a schedule and have the results automatically saved as a PowerBI data set.
Azure Portal enables you to export data to other tools. To do this, in any view that shows **Log Search** just click the **Export** button. Similarly, clicking the **Alert** button will enable you to run a query automatically on a schedule and receive email alerts for particular query results that you set. If you have a PowerBI account, then you will also see a **PowerBI** button that enables you to run a query on a schedule and have the results automatically saved as a PowerBI data set.