Forum Discussion
Intune Connector
- Jul 13, 2022
That's for joining devices to your Active Directory and Azure AD. Azure AD Connect is for synchronizing users/groups to Azure AD.
Description of the Intune Connector:
"The Intune Connector for your Active Directory creates autopilot-enrolled computers in the on-premises Active Directory domain. The computer that hosts the Intune Connector must have the rights to create the computer objects within the domain."
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/mem/autopilot/windows-autopilot-hybrid
That's for joining devices to your Active Directory and Azure AD. Azure AD Connect is for synchronizing users/groups to Azure AD.
Description of the Intune Connector:
"The Intune Connector for your Active Directory creates autopilot-enrolled computers in the on-premises Active Directory domain. The computer that hosts the Intune Connector must have the rights to create the computer objects within the domain."
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/mem/autopilot/windows-autopilot-hybrid
- JaxsDaddy469Aug 31, 2023Copper ContributorThe most basic way to look at is if you want to Hybrid Join EXISTING devices, then you just need to the AD Connector. If you want to Hybrid Join NEW devices, you also need the Intune Connector
- Jul 13, 2022
Ok 🙂 Azure AD Connect syncs users, groups and devices from Active Directory to Azure AD. It can also sync devices from Azure AD back to Active Directory and even groups now. But... That's just that, has nothing to do with Intune. The Intune connector is only for autopilot enrolling devices and joining them to Active Directory and Azure AD aduring that proces. Normally the device would only join Azure AD during autopilot deployment.
Again, you only need to install and use the Intune connector when you want to join a new device during autopilot to both Azure AD and Active Directory. (It's a connector and not a sync tool)