<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"> <id>https://dintux.github.io/</id><title>Dinusha Tharindu</title><subtitle>World of Cloud and EUC.</subtitle> <updated>2025-05-27T08:59:36+00:00</updated> <author> <name>Dinusha Tharindu</name> <uri>https://dintux.github.io/</uri> </author><link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="https://dintux.github.io/feed.xml"/><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" hreflang="en" href="https://dintux.github.io/"/> <generator uri="https://jekyllrb.com/" version="4.4.1">Jekyll</generator> <rights> © 2025 Dinusha Tharindu </rights> <icon>/assets/img/favicons/favicon.ico</icon> <logo>/assets/img/favicons/favicon-96x96.png</logo> <entry><title>A Day in WMI Debugging, The Case of the Missing Uptime</title><link href="https://dintux.github.io/posts/LMWMI/" rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="A Day in WMI Debugging, The Case of the Missing Uptime" /><published>2025-05-26T17:14:00+00:00</published> <updated>2025-05-27T08:59:06+00:00</updated> <id>https://dintux.github.io/posts/LMWMI/</id> <content type="text/html" src="https://dintux.github.io/posts/LMWMI/" /> <author> <name>Dinusha Tharindu</name> </author> <category term="Blogging" /> <category term="Windows" /> <category term="Server" /> <summary>Today I encountered a puzzling issue while working with a monitoring setup: all components were reporting data — except system uptime. Everything else was fine: CPU, memory, disk — all metrics were flowing in smoothly. But the uptime metric stubbornly showed no data. At first glance, it seemed like a data source glitch. But as always, when something defies logic, it’s time to dig into the inte...</summary> </entry> <entry><title>How Nerdio Automatically Updates FSLogix</title><link href="https://dintux.github.io/posts/Nerdifslogix/" rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="How Nerdio Automatically Updates FSLogix" /><published>2025-05-15T17:14:00+00:00</published> <updated>2025-05-15T17:14:00+00:00</updated> <id>https://dintux.github.io/posts/Nerdifslogix/</id> <content type="text/html" src="https://dintux.github.io/posts/Nerdifslogix/" /> <author> <name>Dinusha Tharindu</name> </author> <category term="Blogging" /> <category term="Azure" /> <category term="Nerdio" /> <category term="AVD" /> <summary>If you’ve been managing Azure Virtual Desktop (AVD) environments for a while, you probably remember the days when updating FSLogix meant downloading the latest installer manually, pushing it to your image, and hoping no profile corruption followed. But those days are over — thanks to Nerdio’s built-in automation. Let’s take a look at how Nerdio simplifies FSLogix updates, and what other time-s...</summary> </entry> <entry><title>Keeping Group Access Secure with Azure AD Access Reviews</title><link href="https://dintux.github.io/posts/azuread-access-reviewes/" rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Keeping Group Access Secure with Azure AD Access Reviews" /><published>2025-05-09T17:14:00+00:00</published> <updated>2025-05-09T17:14:00+00:00</updated> <id>https://dintux.github.io/posts/azuread-access-reviewes/</id> <content type="text/html" src="https://dintux.github.io/posts/azuread-access-reviewes/" /> <author> <name>Dinusha Tharindu</name> </author> <category term="Blogging" /> <category term="Azure" /> <category term="Identity" /> <summary>🔐 Keeping Group Access Secure with Azure AD Access Reviews In today’s hybrid work environment, user access needs are constantly changing — people join projects, leave teams, or even exit the company. But too often, their access sticks around long after it’s needed. This kind of access creep is a common security risk — and when it involves external or guest users, the risk grows even more. Tha...</summary> </entry> <entry><title>Taming the Beast, How I Handled a 1GB CSV File with a Simple Bash Script</title><link href="https://dintux.github.io/posts/splitcsv/" rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Taming the Beast, How I Handled a 1GB CSV File with a Simple Bash Script" /><published>2025-04-29T17:14:00+00:00</published> <updated>2025-04-29T17:14:00+00:00</updated> <id>https://dintux.github.io/posts/splitcsv/</id> <content type="text/html" src="https://dintux.github.io/posts/splitcsv/" /> <author> <name>Dinusha Tharindu</name> </author> <category term="Blogging" /> <category term="ITTricks" /> <category term="LifeStyle" /> <summary>👇 The Problem Not long ago, I was deep into an access review project for a client. The task was straightforward on paper: pull a list of who had access to what across a large repository of internal documents. After aggregating logs and generating the report, I exported the data into a CSV file. But there was a catch. The file was almost 1GB in size. I quickly realized I had a problem when m...</summary> </entry> <entry><title>Remote Work and the IT Mind, Psychological Advantages, Industry Realities, and Myth Demolition</title><link href="https://dintux.github.io/posts/workfromhome/" rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Remote Work and the IT Mind, Psychological Advantages, Industry Realities, and Myth Demolition" /><published>2025-04-29T17:14:00+00:00</published> <updated>2025-04-29T17:14:00+00:00</updated> <id>https://dintux.github.io/posts/workfromhome/</id> <content type="text/html" src="https://dintux.github.io/posts/workfromhome/" /> <author> <name>Dinusha Tharindu</name> </author> <category term="Blogging" /> <category term="ITIndustry" /> <category term="LifeStyle" /> <summary>Remote Work and the IT Mind: Psychological Advantages, Industry Realities, and Myth Demolition The shift to remote work in the IT industry is not just a matter of convenience or logistics—it’s a profound alignment with how knowledge workers, especially those in tech, think, operate, and thrive. Psychological research and industry data increasingly show that working from home caters to cognitiv...</summary> </entry> </feed>
