Jesus Christ, you are correct. I think that was one of the bigger reasons why I never bothered. It takes 1023023482349 clicks just to begin learning. Not saying Google is the best, but for the most part learning their competing product was a bit simpler initially, less searching, more doing. None the less I'm excited to see what Azure can do before I drop money on a PSA, RMM etc.
Hey Wayne, stumbled across your webinar while researching O365 retention policies. Great content and I like the style, was just wondering what you use to do these - is this OBS and a green screen or am I way off? Webcam or DSLR?
Awesome video mate - I'm doing a lot with Intune right now and this is a great overview - I'm extremely interested in your App protection policy for Windows (WIP) as I've had some issues with this
Great video. You make Intune sound accessible but then say don't try it without training or professional help. I am a one-man team curious about managing remote workers. I would hope I could dip my toes in and test without having to spend too much money or take a course. Unreasonable?
Thanks JPomp! What I was recommending was not to "wing it" and "google search" your way through it. You'll go down in flames. If you want to train - awesome: train and then start with a basic Intune enrollment and Azure AD Join with all your PC's and get visibility on the health of your managed PC. They are likely pretty messy. Then the real work of getting things cleaned up and in order starts. My opinion is that 99% of IT managers lack the perseverance it takes to complete formal IT training on technologies. They learn bits and pieces and then talk about how the technology sucks because it doesn't work right. And they never learned it right. Anyway, you CAN do it - but don't be a google search IT pro. Do the free training that Microsoft has to get oriented and then get your devices enrolled and build on that. You can do it I'm sure, but the question is will you do the training.
Hi - this is an older video and I don't use that setup anymore. I think it was the Blue Snowball mic. Of al the things I deal with in recording these videos, audio is the #1 biggest hassle of the many hassles of recording these :)
Autopilot is more about individual computers being rolled out for a large group of computers, so I wouldn't think so, but maybe someone here knows something I'm not aware of.
A real quick question. Does this mean that you have dispatched traditional malware protection also in favour of Defender ATP. Does this require a pure Win 10 environment. Most interesting.
Hi breadbaconcheese! The same version of Intune is available in E3 as in E5. What E5 gives you as Azure AD Premium Plan 2 - which means you get Azure Identity Protection (you can look that one up - very powerful security ), and with E5 we also get Azure Information Protection Plan 2, which means we can apply security labels and retention policies automatically. We also get Office 365 ATP and Cloud App Security - again you can look those up as well, though I have spoken about them many times in videos. What I listed here is what is most relevant to IT Pro's. I hope that helps you get started on your learning journey.
Hi Jamal, I agree. One area I'm trying to improve on future videos is the quality of the screen capture, in fact that is a main focus of my next video on files in Office 365.
Xerillion - Is there a way to migrate a user from Iphone XR to Iphone 11 without losing text messages, photos, videos, notes. I've tried using Icloud to no avail (text messages did not transfer). The Apple Configurator and ITunes apps will not allow managing of a InTune managed phone.
Can we roll out intune without having to change the existing anti-virus solution on the endpoint. For example do we need to rollout Microsoft Defender and remove Symantec Endpoint from all laptops?
@@DylanBogusz That's a good question. I'm at a point where I was considering new PSA/RMM to integrate with IT Glue. Intune seems a bit pricier since I know most RMM's are either pay for unlimited devices or pay per device. It makes a difference cost-wise I will say.
So for remote sites (ROBO) do they need an AD server at all anymore? What's going to happen to DNS and DHCP servers normally provisioned on the AD server? Will there be a role shift to a new device now?
Hi Kristopher - no, the remote sides don't need an AD server anymore. You don't even need to connect them to your HQ site with a VPN. DNS and DHCP services are handled through the ISP router or firewall you have onsite. The identities you need to protect in a modern environment are Azure AD identities, not Windows Sever identities.
sysadmin today sucks more and more, the old dayz are gone for good, everything is click and next and install or click etc we will all become cloud services managers etc and not be real system admins
Hey Cloud Strife, I understand the concern, and there was a time years ago I felt the same. I was VERY WORRIED what the cloud meant for IT Pro's like us. It seemed to me our careers were in jeopardy and that it was the developers that were on the rocket ride with all the opportunities. I decided that even though I was worried, I was going to jump onboard with Microsoft cloud and hope for the best. I didn't see another option at any rate. 5 years later I'm blown away. Enterprise cloud IT is WAY MORE SOPHISTICATED THAN ANYTHING YOU OR I PUT ON--PREMISE. And, gone are the stupid issues with hardware failures that make lives miserable. Your comment are more about the worry that you cannot touch/feel/build the hardware. Hardware sucks. Let Microsoft handle that part. We now get to focus on REAL IT work. I'll also say cloud admins/engineers are higher paid and in more demand than traditional server IT admins. It is a matter of 2 years of your life to up-skill and you as an IT Pro will be on your own rocket ride. :)
ya I know and I am learning it now my study path is to be solid with windows server and everything a domain do learn so basics of Cisco routing and switching and system center and powershell after learn azure and intune etc here where I live there is no large company so they won't use all the big stuff How I can learn all the cloud stuffs when im alone studying on my computer without a company backing me ? can I buy some learning subscrition from Microsoft or some demo to learn Azure ?
I understand your point of view and I agree im currently studying everything related to Windows Server and running a domain with some powershell and Linux on the side.. here there is no big business and I feel there is a lot of limitations with on premise software in a agile and fast mobile IT world now... I don't see any business buying System Center or very expensive MS Server license around here So what you suggest as a study path and how I can learn MS cloud cheaply without buying expensive subscription or software ? I am studying alone here on my computer without a company backing me etc should I go back to programming more jobs better pay ? I love sysadmin stuffs but I don't like the future of it seem very bad and automation is around the corner Tell me which skills I should focus learning first and what I should learn later on, Im trying to get the basics of Cisco routing and switching too and learn Exchange on premise with some desktop deployment but I feel that's starting to be a lot for a single person
@@cloudstrife7083 I wouldn't suggest Cisco. I would focus on Office 365 first - get that training and certification. It might mean you have to pay for a few subscriptions each month during your training so you learn how to use it properly. I got the MCSA: Office 365 cert (70-346/70-347), and after that I would focus on Azure - they have a new series of certs to take. You can also sign up for an account and get free Azure compute time each month. Still, I would focus on Office 365 first. For most IT pro's Azure means mostly just rehosting servers in Azure. Servers are going away, but Microsoft 365 cloud services is the future and they are more complicated than what we all used to do with server systems.
Yes that's my goals but I want to learn some Linux too... Tell me why you wouldn't suggest Cisco your afraid of Software Define Network ? if your working at a company and there is a router or switch to manage what do you do ? Why you believe servers are going away and that MS Cloud is the future, what do you think about AWS with Linux on it with scripting ?