If you're a Windows administrator, you'll want this book open on your desk most of the time. With over 40 short chapters, each focused on a specific area of PowerShell, you'll be able to find answers fast. Each valuable technique was developed and thoroughly tested by seasoned PowerShell experts, so you'll be able to consistently produce production quality, maintainable scripts that will save countless hours of time and effort.
"PowerShell in Depth, Second Edition" is the go-to reference for administrators working with Windows PowerShell. Every major technique, technology, and tactic is carefully explained and demonstrated, providing a hands-on guide to almost everything an admin would do in the shell. Written by three experienced authors and PowerShell MVPs, this is the PowerShell book you will keep next to your monitors--not on your bookshelf!
Purchase of the print book includes a free eBook in PDF, Kindle, and ePub formats from Manning Publications.
Don Jones has written dozens and dozens of books and ebooks on information technology topics, and is perhaps most well-known in that space for his "Month of Lunches" series, published by Manning. Don's recently branched out into topics like business management, instructional design, and self-improvement/motivational, along with launching books in science fiction and fantasy. Don lives in Downtown Las Vegas, Nevada, is a huge fan of Disney Parks, and loves Figment best of all.
Took me a while, I admit (even though they were chapters I've skimmed through quickly). First important point about this book: it's really **in depth**. Well, author is not decompiling Powershell on his own :), but he covers some topics I've never seen covered in any other PowerShell book.
For instance: * details of remoting * good description of how credentials work in PS * CIM (it's not that different from WMI, but it's still good to learn the diffs) * DSC (brief description, but unlike to some other books - it covers & emphasizes some very valid points) * Workflows (ok, I think they are useless ;P but now I have a better basis to claim that)
Neither time, nor money wasted. Why 4 & not 5 stars then? Some code samples were very easy-going, debugging chapter has disappointed me a lot, chapters like GUI/DB one doesn't make much sense TBH (it's about using .NET classes, so why bother?). Anyway - if you want to refresh your Powershell-fu, this book is quite a good choice.
Sometimes one has to get into the mind of an enemy, and this one helps an unlucky admin accomplish that. More seriously, if you have to work with PowerShell (and there can be worse fates), this will help you slog through weird variable definitions, cryptic error messages and garbled syntax--and you will even have some fun along the way. Plus, you can occupy yourself reading this while your PowerShell scripts execute with all the alacrity of a lethargic snail.