8/24/2015

Deleting Wifi Connections from Command Prompt

Hello Guys, like ever, after testing a little bit Windows 10 and the Wifi Connections, it's a shame for me,I cannot clic and get "forget network" to introduce the new password for a WiFi Connection , so like always, I go back to the old CMD:






in this case, I have first listed the Wifi Connections then deleted the SK17a connection. Hope it helps

8/04/2015

Empowering the Command Prompt

Let's get the machine package manager CHOCOLATEY a command line application installer for Windows based on a package manager called NuGet. Chocolatey adds, updates, and uninstalls programs in the background requiring very little user interaction.

Open the CMD as administrator and hit:

c:\>@powershell -NoProfile -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Command "iex ((new-object net.webclient).DownloadString('https://chocolatey.org/install.ps1'))" && SET PATH=%PATH%;%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\chocolatey\bin

this command will install the Chocolatey Package Manager























Finally let's install a little program like 7zip for testing....
































that's it....was that Linux ??? :-)

8/01/2015

Windows 10 vs Linux


Windows 10 will come with a command line package manager, much to the lament of Linux users

Sorry, penguin lovers — if you thought that 2015, in the heinous wake of Windows 8, would finallybe the year of desktop Linux, you were sadly mistaken. Microsoft is trying its best to make make amends with Windows 10, to ensure it’s the dream OS for billions of people around the world who use a desktop PC with a mouse and keyboard — and, as a result, this means Microsoft is going to ship Windows 10 with a package manager. Yes, in Windows 10 you can open up a command line shell and install VLC or Firefox or thousands of other packages by typing in a single command.

If you’ve ever ventured into the dark and mysterious land of Linutopia, where Ubutologists and Debianites reign, you will have noticed that one of the things that Linux users are most proud of is package management. While Windows and Mac users have to run graphical installers — you know, where you hit Next a few times and try to avoid installing bundled crapware — Linux users can just open up a command line and type sudo apt-get install vlc. I’m a Windows user through and through, but I have to admit that installing apps and keeping a system updated is much more pleasant in Linux.

With Windows 10, however, we are finally getting an official package manager: OneGet. In the current build of Windows 10 Technical Preview, you can open up PowerShell and use OneGet to install thousands of applications with commands such as Find-Package VLC and Install-Package Firefox. OneGet seems to implement all of the usual functions that you’d expect from a package manager. You can search for packages, add new sources/repos, uninstall packages, install packages, and so on. OneGet uses the same package format as Chocolatey, one of the most popular third-party package managers for Windows (and indeed, you can add the Chocolatey repo to OneGet if you so wish).




Thanks this new post to: www.extremetech.com, original author

Windows 10 has arrived

Hi Guys

As a system admin or I cannot stay quiet after the Windows 10 announcemente past week, at the same day I was noticed from Microsoft that the Enterprise and Professional version was uploaded to the Microsoft Volume Licensing Page, I searched two days at the ende of the weej almost every hour to see If I could download it, but nothing, adn we are a Software Assurance client.
What the hell, I called the Manager from our Microsoft Software Advisor and required the DVD until monday, so next monday I'm going to test it in my worstation, inside a domain and will be the first Windows 10 ever in our enterprise.

So what do we have to expect ? As far as I coul read in the official Microsoft Technical Preview "Introducing Windows 10" Book:

Most IT pros are in their line of work because we love technology, and a new version of Windows holds the promise of exciting new features and capabilities.

Migrating an enterprise to a new version of Windows is a slow, cautious operation, with careful planning and staged deployments that can take years. As a result of that conservatism, many enterprises provide their workers with PCs that lag far behind the devices those workers use at home.

Windows 10 brings a long list of important changes that any IT pro should look forward to, including major improvements in the user experience, significant security enhancements, and a new web browser. ( PROJECT SPARTAN????????)

But the most significant change is designed to remove the anxiety that accompanies enterprise upgrades. The goal of Windows 10 is to deliver new features when they’re ready, rather than saving them for the next major release. In fact, the very concept of a major release goes away—or at least recedes into the distant background—with Windows 10.

Terry Myerson, the Microsoft executive in charge of the operating systems division, calls it “Windows as a Service.” In fact, he argues, “One could reasonably think of Windows in the next couple of years as one of the largest Internet services on the planet. And just like any Internet service, the idea of asking ‘What version are you on?’ will cease to make sense . . . ”

That process has already begun, with the launch in late 2014 of a Windows 10 Technical Preview aimed at IT pros and consumers. Those who have opted into the Windows 10 preview program are receiving major new features, bug fixes, and security updates through the tried-and-true Windows Update channel, with new updates arriving, on average, monthly.




  • The Windows 10 Start menu blends elements of its Windows 7 predecessor with Windows 8 live tiles.





  • In Tablet Mode, the search box shrinks and the Start menu and apps fill the entire screen.