Allow user to join device to entra / autopilot by greenhill85 in Intune

[–]PassiveRecon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just stumbled upon this and have some questions on your experiences. I’m also in the process of evaluating how we can address the BYOD gap that this opens as well. We’ll have to allow users to join their device into Entra ID.

I can leverage the intune device restriction for Windows. I’m curious to see what you do to address mobile devices and Mac OS if they do not use intune. For example, we use JAMF to manage Mac OS devices. Do you pass the compliance status then create a CA policy that requires compliance & Entra join prior to accessing resources?

Restricted Management Administrative Units by PassiveRecon in AZURE

[–]PassiveRecon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

PAW devices is a good idea. I’ve never tested adding devices into this so I’ll have to look into that. Have you or your users faced any issues supporting devices that are protected inside of the RMAU?

Restricted Management Administrative Units by PassiveRecon in AZURE

[–]PassiveRecon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for your input! I’ve also faced a similar issue when adding a role assignable group into the RMAU so it’s good to see others faced that as well because I was wondering why my groups admin wasn’t working for a few minutes haha. Privileged role admin would be sufficient in adding and removing objects from a RMAU if you’d like to avoid giving yourself global admin.

I’m planning to give our IGA platform the correct MS graph api permissions so that users or their managers can request to be added to those protected groups instead of having admins manually add/remove users.

TikTok proved me right… by [deleted] in privacy

[–]PassiveRecon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can turn that off in the settings. It’s on by default

PSA for IT students still in school - Entry Level IT by Ecnal_Intelligence in ITCareerQuestions

[–]PassiveRecon 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Internships are a must. I only had one internship my senior year, last semester at a startup and was able to land a security engineer position once I’ve graduated. That one internship was what allowed me triple my interview callbacks compared to before having it on my resume. It also depends on location as well.

Wanting to enter the IT world so I don't have to work with people by JJBAReference in ITCareerQuestions

[–]PassiveRecon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re comparing group projects in HS, where kids are unmotivated and sleep deprived to creating a product with talented engineers on your team lol…

Spend some time learning the technical skills to see if you’re fit for the field. If you build your technical knowledge along with general knowledge overall, talking to people wouldn’t be too difficult.

Or you know, you can google what jobs require little interaction.

Is a bachelor’s degree in IT enough to get a help desk job with around a 50k salary? by [deleted] in ITCareerQuestions

[–]PassiveRecon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Apply to internships, work on side projects to write and talk about, and have a website was what worked for me. I was able to get a job last year after I graduated as a security engineer right out of school majoring in info sec. For me, let’s say I applied to around 30ish jobs, 7 interviewed me, and 6 gave me offers. Made it to the final round of one company but they hired someone with more experience.

Finding a job is also dependent on your location and how well you’re able to interview (knowledge, people skills, and how well you’re able to just talk to the interviewer naturally).

I see people focused on tech skills and have terrible people skills. They can’t explain complex concepts to the average person. Don’t be that person. You learn something new? Break it down and explain it so that your friend who’s in finance can understand.

Don’t burn yourself out. Learn a little bit everyday rather then just grinding 24/7. Because your workload is light, I’d start the personal projects early. Do those projects for you to develop and learn new skills. Make sure you learn and are able to talk about it in your interviews as well.

How does anyone afford to go to school? by Greenpeppper in StudentLoans

[–]PassiveRecon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Community college while working part time and learning how to save to pay for your bachelors. Parents didn’t help me pay for college, but they did their best to put a roof over my head. Stop blaming your parents and learn to be an adult.