Jeffrey Snover

Jeffrey Snover is a Microsoft Technical Fellow, PowerShell Chief Architect, and the Chief Architect for the Azure Infrastructure and Management group which includes Azure Stack,[1] System Center and Operations Management Suite.[2] Snover is the inventor of Windows PowerShell, an object-based distributed automation engine, scripting language, and command line shell and was the chief architect for Windows Server.[3]

Jeffrey Snover
Professional Developers Conference 2009 Technical Leaders Panel (second left)
NationalityAmerican
EducationUniversity of New Hampshire
OccupationProgrammer, Chief Architect
EmployerMicrosoft
Known forPowerShell, Windows Server, Azure Stack
TitleTechnical Fellow
Websitejsnover.com

Biography

After studying physics at the University of New Hampshire (1978–1982), Snover worked as architect and development manager for Tivoli NetView at Tivoli Software (IBM), and as a consulting software engineer in the DEC management group at Apollo Computer, where he led various network and systems management projects. He also worked at Storage Technology Corporation, and various start-up companies.[4] Snover joined Microsoft in 1999 as divisional architect for the Management and Services Division, providing technical direction for Microsoft's management technologies and products.[4]

Snover is known primarily as the "father" and chief architect of Microsoft's object-oriented command line interpreter Windows PowerShell, whose development began under the codename "Monad" (msh) at the beginning of 2003. He had the idea of an object-pipeline and implemented the first prototype in the C# programming language. After the completion of version 1.0 in November 2006, Windows PowerShell was downloaded nearly one million times within half a year. In 2015, Microsoft promoted Snover to Technical Fellow.[5]

Snover was also the Chief Architect of the Microsoft Management Console (MMC).

Snover held eight patents prior to joining Microsoft, and has registered over 30 patents since.[6][7] He is a frequent speaker at industry and research conferences on a variety of management and language topics.[4]

gollark: No, that's what I get.
gollark: No, it is very excessively expensive.
gollark: I must ask: *so what*?
gollark: ```Common manufacturer(s) TSMCMax. CPU clock rate to 2.34 GHz[2]Min. feature size 16 nm```
gollark: Well, I can read the wikipedia thing, why do you ask?

References

  1. "Azure Stack - It's More Radical Than You Think". Channel 9. Microsoft.
  2. "WinOps". WinOps. WinOps.
  3. "The Cultural Battle To Remove Windows from Windows Server". YouTube. Devops Enterprise 2015 Talk.
  4. "Jeffrey Snover Windows Server". Microsoft Server. Microsoft. Retrieved 2017-11-30.
  5. Schwartz, Jeffrey. "Jeffrey Snover Promoted to Microsoft Technical Fellow". RedMond.
  6. "Patents by Inventor Jeffrey Snover". Jastia Patents. Justia Patents.
  7. "Jeffrey Snover". Events: Speakers. Channel 9. Microsoft.

Bibliography

  • Snover, Jeffrey: Monad Manifesto – the Origin of Windows PowerShell, 2007
  • Grigoreanu, Valentina; Brundage, James; Bahna, Eric; Burnett, Margaret; ElRif, Paul; Snover, Jeffrey (2009). "Males' and Females' Script Debugging Strategies". Proceedings of 2nd International Symposium on End-User Development. IS-EUD 2009. LNCS. 5435. pp. 205–224. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-00427-8_12. ISBN 978-3-642-00425-4. ISSN 0302-9743.

Further reading

  • Oakley, Andy (2005). Monad (AKA PowerShell). O'Reilly Media. ISBN 0-596-10009-4.
  • Jones, Don; Hicks, Jeffery (2010). Windows PowerShell 2.0: TFM (3rd ed.). Sapien Technologies. ISBN 978-0-9821314-2-8.
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