Jeffrey Snover
Jeffrey Snover | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Education | University of New Hampshire |
Occupation | Programmer, Chief Architect |
Employer | Microsoft |
Known for | PowerShell, Windows Server, |
Title | Technical Fellow |
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]
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]
References[]
- ^ "Azure Stack - It's More Radical Than You Think". Channel 9. Microsoft.
- ^ "WinOps". WinOps. WinOps.
- ^ "The Cultural Battle To Remove Windows from Windows Server". YouTube. Devops Enterprise 2015 Talk.
- ^ a b c "Jeffrey Snover Windows Server". Microsoft Server. Microsoft. Retrieved 2017-11-30.
- ^ Schwartz, Jeffrey. "Jeffrey Snover Promoted to Microsoft Technical Fellow". RedMond.
- ^ "Patents by Inventor Jeffrey Snover". Jastia Patents. Justia Patents.
- ^ "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.
External links[]
- Microsoft employees
- Windows people
- American computer programmers
- Microsoft technical fellows
- American computer scientists
- Living people
- Industry and corporate fellows