prompt = """ You are going to test the Jan application by verifying that the hardware information is displayed correctly in the Settings panel. Step-by-step instructions: 0. Given the Jan application is already opened. 1. If a dialog appears in the bottom-right corner titled **"Help Us Improve Jan"**, click **Deny** to dismiss it before continuing. This ensures full visibility of the interface. 2. In the bottom-left menu, click on **Settings**. 3. In the left sidebar, click on **Hardware**. 4. In the main panel, ensure the following sections are displayed clearly with appropriate system information: --- **Operating System** - This section should display: - A name such as "Windows", "Ubuntu", or "Macos" - A version string like "Windows 11 Pro", "22.04.5 LTS", or "macOS 15.5 Sequoia" --- **CPU** - This section should display: - A processor model (e.g., Intel, AMD, or Apple Silicon) - An architecture (e.g., x86_64, amd64, or aarch64) - A number of cores - Optional: An instruction set list (may appear on Linux or Windows) - A usage bar indicating current CPU load --- **Memory** - This section should display: - Total RAM - Available RAM - A usage bar showing memory consumption --- **GPUs** - This section is located at the bottom of the Hardware page — **scroll down if it is not immediately visible**. - If the system has a GPU: - It should display the GPU name (e.g., NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080) - A toggle should be available to enable or disable GPU usage - If no GPU is detected: - It should display a message like “No GPUs detected” --- **Final Check** - Ensure that there are **no error messages** in the UI. - The layout should appear clean and correctly rendered with no broken visual elements. If all sections display relevant hardware information accurately and the interface is error-free, return: {"result": true} Otherwise, return: {"result": false} Use only plain ASCII characters in your response. Do NOT use Unicode symbols. """