This has been a part of the MS knowledge base for at least one year. Why is this "news" now?<p><a href="http://blogs.technet.com/fixit4me/archive/2008/11/19/welcome-to-the-fix-it-for-me-blog.aspx" rel="nofollow">http://blogs.technet.com/fixit4me/archive/2008/11/19/welcome...</a>
No magic at all...
I had my "monthly bluescreen of death" but the "Fixit tool" did not recognize the error. It just told me about a crashing Internet Explorer. This is interesting because I never used my Internet explorer.<p>Unfortunately my system is running smoothly for the rest, so I can't evaluate the ability of the Automated troubleshooters.
2 hours of usage and not impressed so far.
Honestly, this is a great <i>idea</i> for most users, although how MS hopes to pull it off is a mystery, their cryptic error messages are rarely covered at all on their official sites...wouldn't it seem reasonable that the developer that raised the error would be responsible for at least making some somewhat informational note about it? And now, they are intending to actually fix it, automatically???? lol
It seems terrible to me that users should even need tools like this. Why should they have to care about this stuff? Gone are the days when every computer user is a hobbyist.
a good start for users who dont know anything and wont spend hours of searching on technical blogs.<p>simplifying is always the best way to handle with a large front of customer's.