Today, MCTExpert is announcing that our blog site is now available for subscription to users of Amazon's Kindle electronic book. The MCTExpert blog contains the more detailed questions that get asked in my classes that I want to provide a more in depth response to. These are real questions from real Network Administrators in the field. I've had comments from former students that my responses to their questions have helped them pass the Microsoft certification exams. There is a 14 day free trail subscription. Get your daily dose of what other IT professionals are asking about. Click here to go to the Kindle Store.
As I'm writing this article, I'm also writing a customization for a PowerShell course I'm teaching next week in Phoenix. This customization deals with Group Policy and PowerShell. For those of you who attend my classes may already know this, but I sit their and try to ask the questions to myself that others may ask as I present the material. I finished up my customization a few hours ago and then I realized that I did not add in how to put a comment on a GPO. This is a feature that many Group Policy Administrators may not be aware of. This past summer I attended a presentation at TechEd on Group Policy. One organization in the crowd had over 5,000 Group Policies. In an environment like that, the comment section can be priceless. I always like to write in the comment section why I created the policy so I know its purpose next week after I've completed 50 other tasks and can't remember what I did 5 minutes ago. In the Group Policy module for PowerShell V3, th
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