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Joezer Cookey-Gam, Brendan Keane, Jeffrey Rosen, and Jonathan Runyon

"Professional Windows PowerShell for Exchange Server 2007 Service Pack 1"

For some mixed functionality and all exclusive functionality, you have no
choice but to use the Exchange Management Shell.
The Exchange Management Console is a well thought out management interface. Understanding the
organization of the Exchange Management Console is very helpful for understanding the organization of
Exchange Management Shell cmdlets. Its visual arrangement of management elements actually
represents the underlying cmdlet organization that cannot be represented in the shell. By learning this
structure you learn the basic organization of Exchange cmdlets.
Exchange Management Shell provides more than 500 cmdlets for administering your Exchange
organization. Because Exchange Management Shell lacks the hierarchical command interface found in
Exchange Management Console, you may find it easier to manage cmdlets by thinking of them as
organized into sets that share some commonality.
All action in the Exchange Management Shell starts at the command prompt. To use Exchange
Management Shell effectively you must familiarize yourself with some basic concepts for navigation and
control. In Windows PowerShell, the concept of file system navigation is expanded to include systems
such as the Registry and certificate stores. These other systems can be accessed and navigated from the
command line in the same way you would navigate the file system.


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