I headed out onto the front porch with my cup of tea in one hand and the scone balanced between my teeth. It was storming this morning as I headed downstairs for a cup of English Breakfast tea and a freshly baked organic blueberry scone. In addition, why in the world do I want to spend all the money on buying a fancy new powerful CPU only to have it lope along at 5 percent. In fact, some of our servers have blue screened, and when I look at them, they seem to be related to the CPU switching speeds. A balanced power plan for a workstation is just fine and dandy, but I do not feel it is appropriate for our servers. It seems that both Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 install with the “balanced” power plan. Hey, Scripting Guy! I have a real problem. The Microsoft Scripting Guys show you how to do it. Summary: Find the active power plan on remote servers by using Windows PowerShell and WMI information.
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