It's unclear why the OneDrive team only makes OneDrive Sync App Health report data available via a simple web page displaying only 77 rows at a time and failing to provide elementary tools for effectively analyzing OneDrive Sync App Health report data. The need for this should be obvious, I would think. Ineffective administration of a service leads to ineffective adoption of that service. Providing effective tools for the administration of a service one is trying to market aggressively goes hand-in-hand with accompanying the delivery of that service with effective tools for administering and monitoring it. Even the Inventory report, also available through the Microsoft 365 Apps Admin Center, features a bulk export. Numerous other data listings available through the M365 suite of interfaces feature bulk data export. All admins need to be able to perform analysis using spreadsheet methods - no great mystery here. If the data stream from the OneDrive Sync App Health report capability can be fed into an HTML stream, it should be able to be fed into a CSV stream. When one has to administer and monitor thousands or even tens of thousands of user OneDrives, only enabling such administration and monitoring 77 at a time through a simple web UI is significantly unhelpful. I would urge management attention to finally getting this done. Facilitating more effective administration and monitoring of OneDrive services has clear and direct impact on more effective user adoption of OneDrive.