#GETTING UP PC PASSWORD#
This command gets all the computers that have changed their password in the last 90 days.
PS C:\> Get-ADComputer -Filter 'PasswordLastSet -ge $Date' -Properties PasswordLastSet | FT Name,PasswordLastSet Example 3: Gets all computers that have changed their password in specific time frame PS C:\> $Date = ::Today.AddDays(-90) This command gets all the computers with a name starting with a particular string and shows the name, dns hostname, and IPv4 address.
Example 2: Get all computers with a name starting with a particular string PS C:\> Get-ADComputer -Filter 'Name -like "User01*"' -Properties IPv4Address | FT Name,DNSHostName,IPv4Address -A This command gets a specific computer showing all the properties. Examples Example 1: Get specific computer that shows all properties PS C:\> Get-ADComputer -Identity "User01-SRV1" -Properties *ĪllowReversiblePasswordEncryption : FalseĬanonicalName : /Computers/User01-srv1ĭistinguishedName : CN= User01-srv1,CN=Computers,DC=fabrikam,DC=comĭSCorePropagationData :
#GETTING UP PC HOW TO#
To retrieve additional properties use the Properties parameter.įor more information about the how to determine the properties for computer objects, see the Properties parameter description. This cmdlet retrieves a default set of computer object properties. If you have existing Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) query strings, you can use the LDAPFilter parameter. PowerShell Expression Language syntax provides rich type conversion support for value types received by the Filter parameter.įor more information about the Filter parameter syntax, type Get-Help about_ActiveDirectory_Filter. The Filter parameter uses the PowerShell Expression Language to write query strings for Active Directory. To search for and retrieve more than one computer, use the Filter or LDAPFilter parameters. You can also set the parameter to a computer object variable, such as $ or pass a computer object through the pipeline to the Identity parameter. You can identify a computer by its distinguished name, GUID, security identifier (SID) or Security Accounts Manager (SAM) account name.
The Identity parameter specifies the Active Directory computer to retrieve. The Get-ADComputer cmdlet gets a computer or performs a search to retrieve multiple computers. I kept saying the wrong name just to see if you were paying attention.įor more episodes of Replay, visit our HUB, or click the banner below to view episodes on YouTube.Gets one or more Active Directory computers. Brainfreeze from the film, Exit Through the Gift Shop. We haven't heard much since.Īlso, make sure to stick around for an extended second segment covering a PlayStation title, and to hear me laugh possibly harder than I ever have during an episode of Replay. twitter account said a sequel was in the works.
#GETTING UP PC PC#
Oddly, the game was republished for PC in 2013 by Devolver Digital, and that same year the official Ecko Unltd. Join me, Andrew Reiner, Tim Turi, and Jeff Cork as almost all of us take our first look at the 12-year-old game. We scored the game a 7.25 upon release, complaining about its combat (which you will see why in the episode below), but praising its platforming and exploration. In the game, players play as Trane, a budding street artist with parkour skills and a collection of spray paints. Released in 2003, fashion designer Marc Eckō proved he was also a fairly capable game designer with Marc Eckō's Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure.