I've been looking at many different courses on powershell from early in the morning till late in the evening and yours is by far the easiest to follow and understand. God bless you John!
John, your teaching approach is so easy to follow. Most tutorial videos on these subjects don't flow from one logical point to the next like yours does. I'm really surprised that you don't have hundreds of thousands of subscribers. This is top-notch teaching and I REALLY APPRECIATE that you are offering this at no cost. Kudos and Thank you!
I'm a beginner, still running basic commands, this is pure gold. Learning all these little things like semi-colon, as well as the major things like objects.
Thanks a lot for giving these lessons for free. I attended many of your paid onine training classes from IT Pro and they are all worth the money too. :)
I discovered your channel from one of the reddit post. I find your teaching very easy to understand and practical, something thats very rare in advanced technical subjects. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Dear John, Funny thing is, when you mentioned Jeffrey Snover, I paused this video to check a PowerShell unplugged session with Mr. Snover. Just to learn more about him. It was a bit like a PS motivational session. And then back to the Masterclass.
John, I would like to say thank you so much for uploading these videos. Ucertify has a powershell course I have to take for school, and it's not ideal at all. Your videos are mind-opening to me. Powershell is SO POWERFUL! I didn't even think of the fact that the get-process itself is an object with the property -name that sort-object has. Making it so much simpler to filter what I want. If you ever do live session I would love to be apart of that. Even though I am but a noob at this point. Cheers, Nick
Great training and I thank you for it. I find that glossing over the inner workings of how the syntax works for converting a property name using a hashtable left me confused as to what was happening to allow it to work
thanks for the masterclass john. At around 30 minutes or so you are explaining how objects get passed thru the pipeline matching on parameters that the next command expects (by value, by property name). So the stop-process can accept an ID as parameter, but the PS custom object also kept the property name = notepad. Why not match on that one (via the ID you mentioned) which is also specifically stated in the where statement thus filtering it out based on that parameter. I have the feeling I may be missing something. Thanks
Thank you, Mr Savill. My cellphone's view of the top line (where you type yr cmds) is above and outside the line of sight of my little screen. But I don't want to miss anything! Help.
Most of the code is on the github so you could look there. Maybe in your cellphone you can change it to not fill screen then you could see the complete video. Good luck!
So really moving away from azure automation and to powershell in azure functions. That is the future in azure. I’ve just release two videos on powershell in azure functions. Thank you.
@@NTFAQGuy so if the machines are in the same network, we can able run commands on the other machines as well. What if the machines are in the same domain but are in different domain, can we able to connect those machines remotely
@@manikantaguthula5711 in same domain but different domain??? not following at all, sorry. If you mean a different network with no connectivity then no you can't run remote commands without some way to have an IP connection.
@@NTFAQGuy my question was wrong, but you got my intention, thank you so much for all the information sir. I really learned a lot with these lectures. Great lectures
I still don't believe this course is 100% free! The best course so far! I'm loving it! Thanks a lot John! Cheers from Brazil!
Arnies rule number 5, give something back ;-)
I've been looking at many different courses on powershell from early in the morning till late in the evening and yours is by far the easiest to follow and understand. God bless you John!
It is the best training that I ever attend on PowerShell. Thanks John
Very kind, thank you. I''m glad you find it useful!
It is the best powershell training that I ever see on youtube. Thanks John
Very welcome
It's really amazing that all this great content is for free!
John, your teaching approach is so easy to follow. Most tutorial videos on these subjects don't flow from one logical point to the next like yours does. I'm really surprised that you don't have hundreds of thousands of subscribers. This is top-notch teaching and I REALLY APPRECIATE that you are offering this at no cost. Kudos and Thank you!
Very kind, thank you!
I'm a beginner, still running basic commands, this is pure gold. Learning all these little things like semi-colon, as well as the major things like objects.
Glad it helps.
Really appreciate this training. It made me a powershell fan. Thanks a lot John
Awesome!
explanation without hesitate, strait to the point, thank you John !!!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thanks a lot for giving these lessons for free. I attended many of your paid onine training classes from IT Pro and they are all worth the money too. :)
My pleasure. PowerShell is so big these days and figured it made sense to update and get the content out there so everyone can benefit.
Thank you for this John, Im studying for the az-104 and i dont know anything about powershell so im using this to learn. Great stuff!
Love this due - he's a blessing to the IT community god bless
Thank you so much for this wonderful and complete course
I discovered your channel from one of the reddit post. I find your teaching very easy to understand and practical, something thats very rare in advanced technical subjects. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
You are very welcome
This is brilliant John. Thank you very much.
My pleasure. Thanks!
This is great! Thank you so much John, can't believe this is for free.
Hi John, thank you for the videos. The content and the method of teaching is amazing.
Hi John, thank you for this content! Easy to follow, excellent examples, A+ stuff!
Grate John,,,,you are the best the way you explain its just awsome..
Thank you.
Dear John, Funny thing is, when you mentioned Jeffrey Snover, I paused this video to check a PowerShell unplugged session with Mr. Snover. Just to learn more about him. It was a bit like a PS motivational session. And then back to the Masterclass.
Awesome!
@@NTFAQGuy Dear John, I have just seen that you also have some great thoughts on moving forward. I like the personal approach.
@@zt.5677 thank you
Fantastic video. Easy to understand. Well done
Thanks John
Another excellent video. Very useful info. Thanks.
John, I would like to say thank you so much for uploading these videos. Ucertify has a powershell course I have to take for school, and it's not ideal at all. Your videos are mind-opening to me. Powershell is SO POWERFUL! I didn't even think of the fact that the get-process itself is an object with the property -name that sort-object has. Making it so much simpler to filter what I want. If you ever do live session I would love to be apart of that. Even though I am but a noob at this point.
Cheers,
Nick
I’m having a bit of fun ama on Wednesday just to thank people for their support of the channel.
Great training and I thank you for it. I find that glossing over the inner workings of how the syntax works for converting a property name using a hashtable left me confused as to what was happening to allow it to work
thanks for the masterclass john.
At around 30 minutes or so you are explaining how objects get passed thru the pipeline matching on parameters that the next command expects (by value, by property name).
So the stop-process can accept an ID as parameter, but the PS custom object also kept the property name = notepad. Why not match on that one (via the ID you mentioned) which is also specifically stated in the where statement thus filtering it out based on that parameter.
I have the feeling I may be missing something.
Thanks
So informative! Thanks so much ❤
Thank you ! those vids are very high quality !
Great Videos so far...Thanks a lot
Thanks, my pleasure.
continuing to use $_ for now is not a bad thing if you have to support a broad base of computers with older ones.
if "out-gridview" doesn't work for you, your probably missing the module, run:
install-module microsoft.powershell.graphicaltools
Hey, and interesting thing I just found ... "Control-R" works for searching for previous commands that you typed. Sort of like in Bash shell.
you can also just use the up and down arrow keys
Update: Out-Gridview is available in Visual Studio Code
Yes the new powershell 7 brings lots more.
@42:20 how was your PowerShell session connecting to the host if the NIC was disabled?
For an Azure VM I can send commands via the control plane into the guest without using regular networking.
@@NTFAQGuy Ah, though I missed something when I tried to replicate in my lab while following along😂
Really enjoyed that thanks
This is really good stuff!!! I feel like a kid in candy shop!
Awesome!
I personally like -whatIf
Hey Nice Work!!!! how did you get the syntax highlighting???
Excelente treinamento!
Thanks!
Thank you, Mr Savill. My cellphone's view of the top line (where you type yr cmds) is above and outside the line of sight of my little screen. But I don't want to miss anything! Help.
Most of the code is on the github so you could look there. Maybe in your cellphone you can change it to not fill screen then you could see the complete video. Good luck!
Geez, a 50-second response! Are you great or what ?
Thank you!!
Thanks! Great work!
Could you please make video on Azure automation complex scripts....
So really moving away from azure automation and to powershell in azure functions. That is the future in azure. I’ve just release two videos on powershell in azure functions. Thank you.
I dont get how you can send a command to a machine where the nic is disabled? Can anyone explain that to me?
If it’s a vm there is still a path via the virtualization integration .
@@NTFAQGuy i understand. Thanks for the super fast answer. Really like your classes. A big thanks also for that
Can anyone plz tell, how he run commands on remote machine, how the remote machines are connected to the host machine??
They have to have an IP route between them, ie they are connected via the network
@@NTFAQGuy so if the machines are in the same network, we can able run commands on the other machines as well.
What if the machines are in the same domain but are in different domain, can we able to connect those machines remotely
@@manikantaguthula5711 in same domain but different domain??? not following at all, sorry. If you mean a different network with no connectivity then no you can't run remote commands without some way to have an IP connection.
@@NTFAQGuy my question was wrong, but you got my intention, thank you so much for all the information sir. I really learned a lot with these lectures. Great lectures
Ah crap. Was so excited after the first video but this one just completely lost me.
Anyone else watching this thinking "what the hell is he talking about?"
Apparently no
That's me when im watching cosmetic youtube channels