Prof. Powershell


All the Time in World

That New-TimeSpan cmdlet watches the clock for you, so you can attend to important tasks in a timely manner.

The Old Local Admin

Short of learning .NET, here's a way to script something against the ADSI to find out some interesting data about the servers you're working with.

Where Do You Want to Go Today?

Too much information! Make it less complicated with the Where-Object cmdlet.

Do You Measure Up?

Use the Measure-Command cmdlet to get a better idea of your Powershell efficiency.

Picky,Picky,Picky

To minimize the visual clutter, the Select-Object cmdlet lets you view only those properties that you're interested in viewing.

All The Time In The World

Stay on top of schedule with the New-TimeSpan cmdlet.

Ye Olde Local Admin

Use PowerShell to find the password age of a local admin account.

Snappy SnapIns

Plus, the magical Get-Command cmdlet that allows you to be all-knowing.

It Takes a Community

The PowerShell Community Extensions comes with a bevy of scripts and cmdlets that'll give you a leg up on automating your work.

Get the Service You Need

Here's a cmdlet that will have you knowing -- rather than guessing -- what services you're running.

Perfect Printing

Nothing fancy --- the Out-Printer cmdlet provides simple printouts of console text. Of course, this might change.

Tee Off

Tee-Object -- a slight variation on the Out-File cmdlet.

On File

Saving results of commands or queries to a file is easy with this PowerShell cmdlet.

PowerShell AKA

DOS commands seem to work in PowerShell, but not all is as it seems. Here's the trick.

Smooth Operator

Operators are the math geeks of the scripting world. Use them to "do the math" in PowerShell.

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