A simple SOAP template example of invoking a PowerShell command remotely via WS-Man (WinRM) ... this is one way you could build a PowerShell remoting client for non-PowerShell platforms.
This article about accessing Alternate Data Streams in PowerShell is very interesting because it shows how easy it is to EXTEND a TYPE in PowerShell with some simple XML and a few lines of code. VERY cool.
Lee Holmes has a great example of how you can use PowerShell to let users write macros/scripts for your application: LOGO for PowerShell -- yeah, you know: turtle.Left(5) ...
TimeTag is a time series database for the Windows PowerShell environment. Time series databases are useful for capturing and compressing time series data into a fixed size container, and this one comes with PowerShell cmdlets, including charting capability!
By reflecting on a snap-in assembly, Cmdlet Help Editor creates customized barebones documentation that includes the cmdlets, parameters, and attributes ... enabling you to create help topics for Windows PowerShell cmdlets in the correct XML format...
The first hint from Microsoft about the new script documentation (comments that get turned into help) in PowerShell 2 (CTP3+). Oh yeah, and a neat script to turn Hashtables into custom PSObjects.
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How to handle Events in PowerShell (another example of things you just can't do in a string based shell?) a GREAT example of how using PowerShell leads to .Net programming (and how knowing .NET programming translates into knowing PowerShell).
Windows PowerShell is a command-line shell and associated scripting language created by Microsoft. It is built on the .NET framework.
The commands in the Windows PowerShell are called cmdlets, which allow you to manage the computer from the command line.