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Windows Terminal v1.23 and v1.24: new features and installation

Microsoft has released Windows Terminal version 1.23 as a stable update, and version 1.24 as the latest preview, both bringing major improvements to the popular command-line tool. These versions introduce a completely new windowing architecture, expanded settings in the user interface, and other powerful enhancements for productivity and customization. In this article, we’ll explore what’s new in these updates and to how to install the latest stable and preview builds through Microsoft Store, winget, choco, and scoop.

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Who is logged in to PowerShell? Alternatives to whoami

If you are working with PowerShell, you will often face the question: "Under which user is my script running?" In other words, you want to know who is logged in. Many admins use the whoami command on the Command Prompt (cmd). However, PowerShell provides native alternatives to whoami that give you the username and domain.

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Mount an NFS Share on Windows 11 with PowerShell

The Network File System (NFS) is a widely used file-sharing protocol in Linux environments. However, many Windows administrators may not know you can mount an NFS share easily on Windows 11 and Windows Server. This guide shows you step-by-step instructions on activating NFS for Windows and mounting a share using PowerShell.

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Install Microsoft AI Shell on Mac

Microsoft has released AI Shell v1.0.0‑preview.5, which provides a Windows-only security patch, while Preview 4 delivered substantial improvements—enhanced macOS side‑pane support in iTerm2, Entra ID authentication, expanded Invoke‑AIShell functionality (with new -PostCode, -CopyCode, and -Exit flags)—all based on community feedback to improve workflows across Azure OpenAI, macOS, and PowerShell. This article also explains how to install Microsoft AI Shell on macOS.

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METR study: Is AI-assisted coding overhyped?

A new study by METR got a lot of attention online. It claims that developers often overestimate the productivity boost from AI tools. In a coding test, the researchers found that AI caused a 19% "slowdown" for developers. In my opinion, it's not AI coding that's overhyped, but rather the study's findings.

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New GitHub Copilot features in VS Code: custom chat modes, chat tool sets, undoing edits, and Simple Browser

The VS Code May 2025 update (version 1.101), released a few days ago, introduces a range of new features primarily focused on GitHub Copilot. My favorite addition is the custom chat mode, which lets you create a personalized mode alongside the built-in options: Ask, Edit, and Agent. In this post, I'll also explore the new chat tool sets and the undoing edits feature. While the Simple Browser feature was included in the previous release, it deserves discussion. Furthermore, I will briefly summarize the MCP enhancements.

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Docker Desktop MCP catalog: Connect installed MCP servers to GitHub Copilot in VS Code, and Claude Desktop

The MCP catalog in Docker Desktop has been available for a couple of weeks now. However, MCP support only works properly in the just-released Docker Desktop 4.42. The Docker Desktop MCP server catalog significantly simplifies installing MCP servers for any MCP client. I tested it with Gordon (Docker Desktop chatbot), Anthropic Claude Desktop, and VS Code GitHub Copilot on macOS, but the process should be identical on Windows.

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Microsoft Edit: Terminal editor for Windows and Linux

Microsoft. has recently launched Edit, a lightweight terminal editor for Windows and Linux. It revives the spirit of the MS-DOS Editor, which debuted in 1991 as a full-screen text editor for DOS and early Windows systems. Edit eliminates the need to leave the terminal to edit files. While Edit doesn't feature a traditional GUI, it supports tab management and can be navigated using a mouse. On Linux, the open-source tool can be seen as an alternative to nano.

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Envoyer le résultat d’un script dans un attribut AD

Je suis tombé sur une vidéo de la chaine IT-Connect qui traite du déploiement de Windows 11 afin de connaître le pourcentage de machines éligibles et compatibles avec l'OS (TPM, génération de  processeur, etc.).

Et dans cette vidéo il fait remonter le résultat d'un script d'ouverture de session dans les attributs AD des comptes ordinateurs.

Je trouve ça très malin, j'imagine des cas d'utilisation pour avoir de la remontée d'information quand on ne dispose pas d'une gestion centralisée (MEMCM, inventaire, etc).

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Article original écrit par Mr Xhark publié sur Blogmotion le 06/03/2025 | Pas de commentaire |
Attention : l'intégralité de ce billet est protégée par la licence Creative Commons

Cet article Envoyer le résultat d’un script dans un attribut AD provient de : on Blogmotion.
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