


I worked for Quest at the time PowerGUI was in its prime and have some fond memories as it. Help establish administration tiers by making specific tools available to specific groups of users, such as Active Directory administrators, help desk staff, and end users Using PowerGUI with Modern Versions of PowerShell Make the extensive capabilities of PowerShell accessible to users who are not comfortable with the text console environment Streamline PowerShell-based administration tasks by providing ready-made tools through a unified interface PowerGUI Administrative Console is designed to:

The visual imagery of that one is precious!). (10,000 thanks to Paul Madden for introducing me to that wonderful phrase. When I first started telling people about Object Pipelines, ObjectFlow engines, and Know-Nothing Utilities – people looked at me like I had a rat’s tail hanging out of my mouth. Dmitry Sotnikov and the guys at Quest really got where we were going with PowerShell and PowerGUI does a great job exploiting PowerShell’s capabilities. PowerGUI ROCKS! If you haven’t used it yet, you should download it (it’s free) and kick the tires. Yesterday was the official launch of Window Server 2008, the first version of Windows to include PowerShell! Is that a good day or what? How could the day get any better? Well, the people at Quest Software answered that question by officially releasing PowerGUI!
