Forum Discussion
HotCakeX
Apr 08, 2020MVP
Documentation about Inune only enrollment on Microsoft Docs and use cases
Hello, I was reading this doc: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/archive/blogs/nzedu/10-ways-to-enroll-windows-10-into-intune and to view all of the 10 ways, it was suggested to go to this page:...
- Apr 10, 2020If you don't do an Azure AD join, the user doesn't login with his AAD credentials. This isn't desired
A user can always change policies if the user is a local admin on his device. With this enrollment method this is always the case.
I would strongly advise that a user isn't a local admin. You can use the site I linked above to check what enrollment suits you best
Thijs Lecomte
Bronze Contributor
If you would enroll it like #3, the device would also be joined to AAD
To my knowledge, all W10 devices that enroll into Intune are also joined to AAD, no exceptions
To my knowledge, all W10 devices that enroll into Intune are also joined to AAD, no exceptions
HotCakeX
Apr 09, 2020MVP
How come?
Scenario 3: Enroll in MDM Only (User Driven)
it's this:
- Thijs LecomteApr 09, 2020Bronze ContributorI'll test this, I'll let you know when I have tested
But I thought enrollment requires the device in AAD- HotCakeXApr 09, 2020MVPThank you so much!
- Thijs LecomteApr 10, 2020Bronze ContributorI just tested
If you use this method, it indeed only joins to Intune. I was mistaken
It does create a device in AAD (on object), but it's not joined to AAD.
As mentioned on the blog post this would only be used in BYOD (personal devices that require management) or if you don't have automatic enrollment.
Why are you planning to use it?