Aidan takes a look back at 2018 and discusses some of the highlights from each month. It is interesting to me how I underrated some announcements which later became significant to Microsoft customers or to me.
Microsoft has released a new version of SharePoint and with it comes a couple new features to help you recover from an outage.
PowerShell is great at getting lots done for Office 365 administrators. As an example, here are a couple of ways to check the membership of an Office 365 Group or a Microsoft Team to find out whether a specific user is already present. You might never need to use this tip, but then again, it’s always surprising when PowerShell comes to the rescue.
Aidan takes a look at the preview “Az” PowerShell modules that are designed to be a replacement for the older AzureRM modules and AzureRM.Netcore.
Microsoft has updated the Teams PowerShell module to version 0.9.5. The best thing about the refresh is that the Get-Team cmdlet works. Well, it can now retrieve a full list of Teams in an Office 365 tenant. It would be good if Get-Team returned more data and supported server-side filtering, but it’s a start.
October was a busy time for Azure announcements, here’s what you need to know about the announcements last month.
In the final part of this two-part article, Russell shows you how to install Puppet 5 on Red Hat Linux.
Looking to see what the pro’s use every day? Aidan shares the apps that help him in the workplace.
Want to learn the clean and pretty ways to dig into your SharePoint farm? Here’s an easy to follow guide to get the process started.
In this Ask the Admin, I’ll show you how to get started with the OpenSSH client in the Windows 10 April 2018 Update.