device
What are my device and browser specs
Overview: battery, network, and hardware — with links to specialized tools.
Live summary — data read only in your browser, never sent to servers.
Solutions that can help in your case
Other tools
How the device summary works
This page is a live hub: it reads battery, network, hardware, and display APIs in your browser and shows a compact overview. Each card links to a specialized tool for deeper checks.
Nothing is uploaded to “analyze” your device. Values appear only when the browser exposes them — and we label privacy-limited or missing APIs instead of inventing specs.
How to use the hub in 3 steps
Open the hub: Load this page on HTTPS in a modern browser.
Read the summary: Scan battery, network, hardware, and display cards.
Go deeper: Click a card to open the specialized tool.
Act: Fix habits, network, or hardware based on honest results — not invented specs.
Is your device feeling slow, hot, or hard to diagnose?
When a laptop or phone misbehaves, people often guess: “Is it the battery? The Wi-Fi? Not enough RAM?” Opening system settings on every platform is slow. This hub answers the first triage in one screen.
Use the cards above for a snapshot, then open Battery Level, Connection Type, RAM & Cores, or Display & System for a full test. That path is faster than digging through OS menus — and stays private by design.
Practical triage tips
- Start with online status and battery if the device dies mid-day.
- If calls lag, open Connection Type and compare Wi-Fi vs cellular estimates.
- If apps thrash, check RAM & Cores — and remember browser values can be privacy-capped.
- If UI looks blurry, open Display & System and check resolution, DPR, and zoom.
- Re-run the hub after changing networks (home Wi-Fi → café → mobile).
- Prefer Chrome/Edge for battery and network APIs; Safari hides more by design.
- On Mac, About This Mac remains the source of truth for exact RAM/CPU.
- Do not chase “fake 100% specs” from random web tools — many invent numbers.
What this hub shows (and what it does not)
You get a browser-side snapshot: battery when available, online/network hints, logical cores, estimated RAM buckets, and display/system basics.
It is not a system profiler, antivirus, or Apple Diagnostics. We never claim full M-series core counts or exact GB of RAM when the browser refuses to expose them.
When to open each specialized tool
Battery Level — charge state and drain context. Connection Type — Wi-Fi/cellular class and RTT estimates when exposed. RAM & Cores — hardwareConcurrency and deviceMemory with privacy caveats. Display & System — resolution, viewport, theme, language, timezone.
The hub is the map; specialized tools are the deep dives.
Privacy and secure context
Battery and some network APIs need HTTPS and a compatible browser. Privacy modes can spoof cores and hide memory. That is expected platform behavior, not a bug on our side.
We do not build a fingerprint dossier from this page to sell ads against your identity.
How this helps everyday problems
Remote workers diagnose “my call is bad” faster. Students check battery before class. Gamers jump from device hub to ping tools when lag appears.
Honest limits build trust — and keep Google/AdSense policy safer than fake hardware claims.
When upgrades or accessories make sense
If triage shows weak battery habits, congested Wi-Fi, or low browser-reported RAM, accessories (power banks, mesh, SSD/RAM) can help — but measure first. Use specialized tools, then decide.