What Are My Device Specs?

Comprehensive hardware and system information detection

🖥️ Display

⚙️ Hardware

🎮 Graphics (GPU)

💻 System

🌐 Browser

📡 Network

Device Features

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Understanding Your Device Specifications

Your device specifications reveal important details about your computer or mobile device's capabilities. This information is useful for troubleshooting, checking system requirements for software and games, and understanding your hardware's performance potential.

What Can Be Detected?

  • Display: Screen resolution, pixel density, color depth, and viewport size
  • Hardware: CPU cores, available memory (RAM), and device type
  • GPU: Graphics card vendor and model (via WebGL)
  • System: Operating system, architecture (32-bit vs 64-bit), and platform
  • Browser: Browser type, version, and supported features
  • Network: Connection type and online status

Limitations

Due to browser security and privacy restrictions, we can only detect information that's exposed through standard web APIs. We cannot access detailed hardware information like exact CPU models, motherboard details, or storage capacity. For complete system information, use your operating system's built-in tools (System Information on Windows, About This Mac on macOS, or system monitoring tools on Linux).

Why System Specs Matter

Knowing your device specifications is essential when checking software or game system requirements, troubleshooting performance issues, or deciding whether to upgrade your hardware. Many applications list minimum and recommended specs, and comparing them to your actual hardware helps you make informed decisions about compatibility and expected performance.

CPU Cores and Performance

The number of CPU cores in your processor affects how well your device handles multitasking and parallel workloads. Modern processors range from 2 cores in budget devices to 16 or more in high-end workstations. More cores help with tasks like video rendering, compiling code, and running multiple applications simultaneously, though single-core speed still matters for many everyday tasks.

RAM and Memory Detection

Browser-based memory detection reports an approximate value using the Device Memory API, which rounds to the nearest power of 2 for privacy reasons. While this gives a general indication of your device's RAM capacity, for exact memory specifications you should use native system tools on your operating system.