Welcome to MSDN Blogs Sign in | Join | Help

November 2007 - Posts

Distributed PowerShell Available Today Via Specops Command

When I worked in the CTO office at Tivoli, I identified the fact that there were just a handful of design patterns for distributed applications and distributed management in particular.  We then started a management framework project to support those

RedMonk On System Center, Virtualization, IBM, and PowerShell

Michael Cote and James Governor of RedMonk have a good video on their view of the state of Microsoft as of IT Forum 2007 HERE .  These guys are both smart and fun and their perspective is always enjoyable.  I thought these guys were wicked smart

Learning PowerShell

John Sheehan has blogged his experiences learning PowerShell over his Thanksgiving holiday.  You can read about them HERE .  I found it a fun read. Jeffrey Snover [MSFT] Windows Management Partner Architect Visit the Windows PowerShell Team

New-HashTable

John Sheehan the architect for Microsoft Application Virtualization (aka SoftGrid) recently jumped on the PowerShell bandwagon and was nice enough to write up his experiences.  At one point he wrote himself a process monitor which involved putting

PowerShell Plus Beta Available

I just got mail from Tobias Weltner letting me know that they are making PowerShell Plus free for non-commercial use.  If you have not checked this tool out - you should. PowerShell Plus is like what you'd get if the Console spent a year with a 24x7

Graphing with Glee

Doug Finke has a blog HERE which shows you how to use PowerShell to program GLEE - Graph Layout Execution Engine. GLEE is a .NET tool for graph layout and viewing developed by Lev Nachmanson of Microsoft Research. You can read more about GLEE HERE . I

Developing Your Own Custom Commands

Jim Truher has written a great article in the Dec 2007 MSDN Magazine walking through the steps for writing your own custom commands.  Jim was one of the founding members of the PowerShell team and co-designed the Language with Bruce Payette . 

RedMonk Interview

I did an interview with Michael Cote from RedMonk at IT Forum earlier this week. It runs 10 minutes and covers a range of topic including our V2 CTP. You can check it out HERE . I've had a number of talks with Michael and really enjoy them. Michael has

PowerShell Security

Derek Melber has a very good analysis/summary of the PowerShell security over at WindowsSecurity.Com. If you run across someone concerned about the security aspects of PowerShell, this would be a good article to point them to. The article is HERE . Jeffrey

IT-Forum: Demo files for all talks

Attached is a zip file containing all the demo files I've used at IT Forum. Jeffrey Snover [MSFT] Windows Management Partner Architect Visit the Windows PowerShell Team blog at: http://blogs.msdn.com/PowerShell Visit the Windows PowerShell ScriptCenter

IT-Forum: Mgt308 Managing Systems with PowerShell - PDF

I'm doing this as seperate posts because I'm having trouble doing it as a single ZIP file. Attached is a PDF of my presentation. Jeffrey Snover [MSFT] Windows Management Partner Architect Visit the Windows PowerShell Team blog at: http://blogs.msdn.com/PowerShell

IT-Forum: Mgt308 Managing Systems with PowerShell - PPT

Attached is my presentation. Jeffrey Snover [MSFT] Windows Management Partner Architect Visit the Windows PowerShell Team blog at: http://blogs.msdn.com/PowerShell Visit the Windows PowerShell ScriptCenter at: http://www.microsoft.com/technet/scriptcenter/hubs/msh.msp

SQL Server Support for PowerShell!

Finally the information is public!!! You can't image how difficult it has been to know this information but not be able to tell anyone. It's so cool you just want to stop people on the street and tell them. Check out this eweek article: Microsoft Releases

-Name in Get-XXX Cmdlets

I just saw a cool article by Don Brown who has written a set of SMS Cmdlets for Windows PowerShell . These work with SMS 2003 and are well worth a look-see if you are an SMS customer. (Btw – I wrote Get-XXX to mean GET-(any nounname) but now that I look

Notes for My TechEd Talk

If you are interested in my presentation: TECHED: What's New for Developers in PowerShell V2 , you might be interested in this BLOG ENTRY by Sebastien Lambla over on http://serialseb.blogspot.com/ . He took very good notes during my session and posted

TECHED: What’s New for Developers in PowerShell V2

Attached is the Deck I just presented at TechEd. I've provided it in PPT and PDF formats Jeffrey Snover [MSFT] Windows Management Partner Architect Visit the Windows PowerShell Team blog at: http://blogs.msdn.com/PowerShell Visit the Windows PowerShell
Posted by PowerShellTeam | 8 Comments

Attachment(s): TechEdTalk.zip

Update-Gac.ps1

Below is the content of the Update-GAC.ps1 script that I run whenever I install a new version of PowerShell. Our installation is supposed to ngen the assemblies in the background. If that works, it doesn't work fast enough for me. Also I've seen lots

CTP: Get-AliasSuggestion Rewritten to us CTP functions

I'm really enjoying the book Windows PowerShell Cookbook by Lee Holmes. It has lots of neat scripts. I decided to grab one and re-write it to highlight some of the features in the PowerShell V2 CTP. Below is the content for Get-AliasSuggestion.PS1 #requires

Check it out: Out-vCard

Check out Dmitry Sotnikov's blog Out-vCard: Exporting Outlook Address Book . It lets you do things like: Get-QADGroupMember DL.ProjectA | Out-vCard To create a Vcard file for every member of a distribution list. This made my day (and I was already having

PowerShell V2 Book Available!

The PowerShell ecosystem is once again proving itself to be super smart and agile. Superstar's Don Jones and Jeffery Hicks are once again demonstrating why they are MVPs for PowerShell. On Nov 12 th , they (and Sapien Press) will release an electronic

What's New in CTP of PowerShell 2.0

As you start to play with the CTP bits of Windows PowerShell 2.0 , it would be wise to tell what's new in this CTP release. First thing to know is that this release is compatible with and replaces Windows PowerShell 1.0. You must un-install PowerShell

The Community Technology Preview (CTP) of Windows PowerShell 2.0

The Windows PowerShell Team is pleased to release the first Community Technology Preview (CTP) of Windows PowerShell 2.0! This release provides a “sneak peak” into the future, including key features that empower Windows administrators to: Run commands
Posted by PowerShellTeam | 16 Comments
Filed under:

CTP: Watch This Space

Next week we'll be releasing a Community Technology Preview (CTP) of Windows PowerShell V2.0. This release will not be for everyone. This morning I wrote 3 blog entries that set your expectation about the CTP. I decided to blog them BEFORE the CTP because

CTP: Versioning

Next week we'll be releasing a Community Technology Preview (CTP) of Windows PowerShell V2.0. I'm going to hold off saying what is in it until next week. The purpose of this email is to set your expectations about the CTP. Versioning The PowerShell CTP

CTP: Platform Requirements

Next week we'll be releasing a Community Technology Preview (CTP) of Windows PowerShell V2.0. I'm going to hold off saying what is in it until next week. The purpose of this email is to set your expectations about the CTP. Platform Requirements The first

CTP: CTP -NE Beta!

Next week we'll be releasing a Community Technology Preview (CTP) of Windows PowerShell V2.0. I'm going to hold off saying what is in it until next week. The purpose of this email is to set your expectations about the CTP. CTP -NE BETA ! The first thing
 
Page view tracker