ICYMI: PowerShell Week of 03-April-2020
Topics include Windows Terminal, Event Logs, String Basics and more.
PowerShell articles, tutorials, and guides from community experts.
Topics include Windows Terminal, Event Logs, String Basics and more.
Topics include Azure functions, Windows Performance, O365 and more…
Topics include Windows Terminal, LAPS, HTML and more…
Topics include Azure, GPOs, Bits and more…
Topics include Windows Terminal, Event Logs, String Basics and more. Special thanks to Robin Dadswell, Prasoon Karunan V, Kiran Patnayakuni and Kevin Laux Dynamic PowerShell and SSH remoting tabs for Windows Terminal by Luke on 29th March I am a SysAdmin and have to connect to dozen of different computers every day, I needed to bring this a little further and make it more “dynamic”: every time I open a remoting tab, it should ask for the computer name and the username if necessary.
Topics include Switch Statements, Try Catch, Python and more… Special thanks to Robin Dadswell, Prasoon Karunan V, Kiran Patnayakuni and Kevin Laux Use cases for the new null coalescing operator in PowerShell 7 by Luc on 22nd March Tips and use cases for the new null coalescing operator in PowerShell 7. Getting into Python by Referencing PowerShell by @SOZDBA on 23rd March Trying to break his PowerShell dependency Shane shares an example for a script he wrote in both Python and PowerShell.
EDIT: We have extended the CFA to May 25th! The _ PowerShell Conference Book Volume 3 _ Call for Authors (CFA) is now open! http://bit.ly/PSConfBook3CFA The timeline for this process should be as follows: Close submissions on Monday, May 4th, at 11:00 PM PDT Notify everyone by May 25th Final drafts will be due by June 1st Finalize publication by September 30th We are looking for one chapter per author on the topics of PowerShell, DevOps, WinOps, Open Source, or IT Careers.
Topics include Select-String, Should Process, PowerShell Summit and more…
Topics include Splatting, PS7 Experimental features, VSCode and more…
The below link leads to the module I am writing about in this blog post. LINK TO POWERSHELL MODULE At my place of work a task needed to be completed that would allow us IT administrators to set the default lock screen image for our devices. Group Policy was my first thought however it was to broad of a solution. The rules basically became, set the default lock screen on some of the newer laptops and if a default lock screen has been manually chosen by a user; don’t change it.
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