Welcome!
There's a lot of PowerShell out there on the Web... I've created this site mainly to help me keep track of it all. To help cut down on spam and useless sites, I only add sites manually, upon request. You can e-mail me by using the "Contact Us" link in the menu bar; select the "ShellHub.com" option in the contact form. Be sure to provide a link, and let me know what single category your site best fits into.
Within each category, I've highlighted any items that are my own, or that I've personally found to be very useful. The decision on what gets highlighted as "featured" is entirely my own - please don't e-mail me asking for your listing to be upgraded. If it's something I'm personally using, it'll be "featured."
When I'm aware of a commercial affiliation for a site, I've noted that.
Feel free to contact me if you find a dead link (provide a new one, if one exists), or if I've gotten something incorrect.
- Personal Favorites are the sites I get a lot of use out of myself, and am constantly referring people to.
- Blogs that are entirely or mostly PowerShell-related; also include online magazine columns and other articles.
- Editors and Tools, which includes commercial products.
- Shell Add-Ins and Modules, which may include commercial products.
- FAQs and Forums, including wikis and other Q&A sites that focus primarily on PowerShell
- Books about PowerShell
- Training for PowerShell; lists companies that routinely provide training but does not attempt to have a current schedule for these companies. Also includes self-paced training.
- Other Resources, including podcasts, IRC channels, code repositories, and so forth.
- Archive contains links to older video interviews and whatnot. For posterity's sake.
- NEW! Proverbs contains a short list of some of Don's pithier PowerShell sayings.
- NEW! FAQ Answers links to articles that answer some of the questions Don gets most frequently.
Posting policy: My intent is to add every site that's called to my attention, provided the site is clearly and almost entirely dedicated to Windows PowerShell. In the case of things like blogs or podcasts, I'd like to see a history of regular, quality postings - at least a few months' worth. I'm doing this primarily as a service to my class and conference students, to help whittle down the incredible amount of stuff on the Internet into some reasonably-sized directory of real, high-quality resources.