|
Showing 1 - 13 of
13 matches in All Departments
DESCRIPTION PowerShell provides a single, unified administrative
command line from which to control and automate virtually every
aspect of a Windows system. It accepts and executes commands
immediately, and scripts can be written to manage most Windows
servers like Exchange, IIS, and SharePoint. This updated book
covers PowerShell features that run on Windows 7, Windows Server
2008 R2, and later. This edition is appropriate for PowerShell
version 3 and later. There is coverage for new PowerShell version 5
features like PowerShellGet, however PowerShell fundamentals are
unchanged. Learn Windows PowerShell in a Month of Lunches, Third
Edition is an innovative tutorial designed for busy IT
professionals. With just one hour a day for a month, readers will
be automating Windows tasks faster than they ever thought possible.
They start with the basics (What is PowerShell and what can be done
with it). Then, it moves systematically through the techniques and
features that facilitate efficient and effective results. KEY
FEATURES * A great start with a great tutorial * Concise and
easy-to-follow * Based on years of successful training techniques *
Hands-on exercises and labs AUDIENCE Experience with Windows
administration is helpful. No programming or scripting experience
is assumed. ABOUT THE TECHNOLOGY PowerShell is an automation engine
for Windows systems. It is being built into all major Microsoft
products and many third party products. PowerShell allows for the
automations of day to day administration tasks and is a must learn
technology for administrators.
Donald Jones' walking tours of Toronto have drawn crowds of up to
5000 at a time. His 'Historic Toronto' column in the Star has
proved one of the city's most widely read newspaper features. Now
for the first time he has gathered together some of his personal
favourites - stories of triumph and treachery, the celebrated and
the notorious. The result is a richly entertaining collage of
amazing and amusing tales of the city and its people. Here we learn
that the first airmail plane in Canada landed in Toronto so loaded
with liquor it could barely fly. We find out how a forgery by John
Strachan brought tens of thousands of immigrants to the city. Jones
recounts the visits to Toronto by great writers, including Oscar
Wilde and Charles Dickens, and tells of Torontonians who made
international names for themselves, like Bea Lillie and Elizabeth
Arden. Old mysteries still unsolved are reconsidered: Was the
founder of Upper Canada College the real hero of the battle of
Waterloo? How did Prince George, remembered in the name of the
Princes' Gates, really die? Did Toronto's Captain Roy Brown in fact
kill the Red Baron during 'the most controversial 60 seconds in the
history of aerial warfare'? At the heart of his stories are people.
Some of their names have been forgotten and deserve to be
remembered: Dr. Anderson Abbott, Canada's first black doctor, who
was greatly admired by Lincoln; Margaret Saunders, whose book
Beautiful Joe has sold 7 million copies to date; and Ernest Jones,
who helped Freud escape from Austria and the Gestapo. Old Toronto
comes vividly to life in these tales. For the hundreds of thousands
of Star readers who love Donald Jones' columns, here is a
collection of the best. And for those who have yet to discover the
delights of his perspective on the city, Fifty Tales of Toronto
provides a marvellous introduction to its history.
|
|