users
82 TopicsAZ-500: Microsoft Azure Security Technologies Study Guide
The AZ-500 certification provides professionals with the skills and knowledge needed to secure Azure infrastructure, services, and data. The exam covers identity and access management, data protection, platform security, and governance in Azure. Learners can prepare for the exam with Microsoft's self-paced curriculum, instructor-led course, and documentation. The certification measures the learner’s knowledge of managing, monitoring, and implementing security for resources in Azure, multi-cloud, and hybrid environments. Azure Firewall, Key Vault, and Azure Active Directory are some of the topics covered in the exam.22KViews4likes3CommentsPeriodic Table of Office 365 is now dynamic and web-based
The Periodic Table of Office 365 is now web-based, clickable with app descriptions, available in seven languages, and embeddable. That's right, you can have a live version right in your intranet or website -- just like what you see below! Check it out and make sure to give us feedback. (Just remember, it's in BETA.) Never heard of it? This graphic is a popular resource for explaining WHAT Office 365 is to IT, users, management, you name it. You can't talk about something if you can't define it, right? [http://icsh.pt/DynamicTable | https://periodictableofoffice365.azureedge.net]1.9KViews4likes3CommentsSign up for Windows known issue email alerts on Microsoft 365 admin center
Good day, everyone! Today, Microsoft is announcing the availability of email alerts for Windows known issues, on the Microsoft 365 admin center. These alerts are designed to help you quickly learn about the disclosure of known issues, as well as important updates such as new workarounds or resolutions. You can sign up today on the Windows release health section of the Microsoft 365 admin center. This feature is available to IT admins with a Windows or Microsoft 365 tenant, a volume licensing subscription which provides access to Windows release health in the Microsoft 365 admin center, and an eligible admin role. To sign up, visit the Windows release health section in the Microsoft 365 admin center. Once there, select Preferences > Email and select Send me email notifications about Windows release heath. Additional options provide the ability to select which Windows versions to receive alerts about. You can also add up to 2 additional email addresses to receive alert notifications, allowing you to keep colleagues informed of issues even if they don’t have access to the admin center. Take a closer look in the new blog post New feature: Sign up for Windows known issue email alerts. You can also watch this short video for a quick step-by-step on how to subscribe: How to sign up for Windows known issue email alerts | Microsoft 365 admin center. Have a great day!1.3KViews1like0CommentsTotal number of Users who have access to a Sharepoint document
All, I am a new Modern Sharepoint Online Site Owner I need to find out the total number of Users that have access to a document on a Modern Sharepoint Online Site. Looking at the Manage Access, I see and the following icon: I understand I can select Advanced and manually count the Users that have access. But isn't there a Powershell command or something I can run to get the total number of Users that have access to a document? Any assistance would greatly be appreciated. T.J.2.1KViews1like0CommentsCan't add local user "Guest" account to login screen
I must be losing my mind. I have Azure AD joined Windows 10 machines (corporate ownership model), but I would like to add a persistent local guest user login to the login screen, and I can't seem to do it. I can add the user, but it doesn't appear as a choice on the login screen. Only "Other user..." appears (along with whoever last logged on). First I tried what I have done historically - via "lusrmgr.msc" and enabled the built-in Guest account. No password, can't change password, etc...AFAIK doing this would result in a new "Guest" login appearing on the login screen, but alas it does not. FWIW it doesn't work for the built-in administrator account either. I also tried another approach - using Windows 10 "Settings-->Accounts-->Other Users-->Add someone else to this PC" and added a local standard user without a MS Account or password, and while that adds the account (I see the profile created under the user folder, and the user has been added to the local users' group according to "lusrmgr.msc", and I then added this new user to the "guests" group and removed from "users", but it doesn't actually appear on the login screen like I thought it used to. I then tried using the Windows Config Designer app to create a "Shared Computer" provisioning package - and while this sort of worked (a new Guest account was added to the login screen) it seemed to wipe out other critical settings on the computer, like, for example, Windows Hello sign-in settings got wiped out for the computer owner. What am I missing? At first I thought it was perhaps a Windows version issue (Insider vs. release) or Intune policy conflict, but I have tried this now on other tenants with and without Intune that are cloud-only Azure AD joined devices and I can't get it to work anywhere. This used to be so simple. Anyone else able to do this? Thanks, Bob7.7KViews1like2Comments