It looks like Apple is having issues this morning with their APNS portal. I have heard scattered reports about users not being able to enroll new IPhones.
**Update this has been resolved.
It looks like Apple is having issues this morning with their APNS portal. I have heard scattered reports about users not being able to enroll new IPhones.
**Update this has been resolved.
So I have had the pleasure (sarcasm, massive amounts of sarcasm) in dealing with remote power shell in the last couple of days So I figured I would write a quick guide on how you can connect to another machine, outside of your domain, with remote Power shell. This is useful if you want to run Exchange cmdlets from your local machine, run tests on your local power shell instance while connecting to a test lab, or countless other ways. First lets talk about remote power shell, and what it is.
Remote power shell is a tool that allows you to remotely managed services using WS-Management protocol and the Windows Remote Management (WinRM) service. The WS-Management protocol is a public standard for remotely exchanging management data with any computer device that implements the protocol. The WinRM service processes WSMan requests received over the network. It uses HTTP.sys to listen on the network.
In my test scenario, I am trying to connect to my test lab (testlab.com) with remote powershell, from my work machine (workdomain.com) The first problem that I am going to come across is that my machines are in different domains, and we are not going to be able to create a trust between them. I found a great KB that walked me through the actual technical piece.
I have listed those steps here
1. Start Windows PowerShell as an administrator by right-clicking the Windows PowerShell shortcut and selecting Run As Administrator.
2. The WinRM service is confi gured for manual startup by default. You must change the startup type to Automatic and start the service on each computer you want to work with. At the PowerShell prompt, you can verify that the WinRM service is running using the following command:
get-service winrm
The value of the Status property in the output should be “Running”.
3. To configure Windows PowerShell for remoting, type the following command:
Enable-PSRemoting –force
In many cases, you will be able to work with remote computers in other domains. However, if the remote computer is not in a trusted domain, the remote computer might not be able to authenticate your credentials. To enable authentication, you need to add the remote computer to the list of trusted hosts for the local computer in WinRM. To do so, type:
winrm s winrm/config/client ‘@{TrustedHosts=”RemoteComputer”}’
Here, RemoteComputer should be the name of the remote computer, such as:
winrm s winrm/config/client ‘@{TrustedHosts=”CorpServer56″}’
A few problems that I came across.
In 20 or 30 years, you’ll be able to hold in your hand as much computing knowledge as exists now in the whole city, or even the whole world.
It is such a crazy world we live in, today I have been troubleshooting my brother’s 32GB SD card. Think about that for a second, I am holding a 32 GB SD card, that 20 years ago, wasn’t even possible to create in such small space. The miracles of technology.
I’ve had the pleasure of speaking to the team over at Zenprise a couple of times at BlackBerry world (formerly WES) a few years ago, and I was very impressed with their product. Recently, Citrix bought Zenprise. The obvious reason that Citrix is doing this is to get into the MDM game, in technology cash is king usually and Citrix just decided it wants to become a player. I am curious as to why they didn’t buy MobileIron or Airwatch, maybe the asking price was too much. I’ve always though Zenprise was feature rich, but behind the big two. We’ll have to wait to see how this plays out. I think one of the reasons that the MDM market is going to become saturated very quickly, is because it is incredibility painful to move off an MDM solution. Think about it for a moment, let’s say your doing an email migration from Domino to Exchange, you at least have control over the software on the computer’s your moving to. In MDM, you have to remove applications from sometimes several hundred devices, re-enroll Iphones, Androids and reconfigure connections to the BlackBerry servers. Never mind the hundreds of hours it takes to work with all your users. The lesson here, Be very sure you choose the correct MDM vendor
So I’ve been reviewing the BlackBerry 10 policy guide, and it looks like the current version, 6.2 has added the IT policy rules.
They have also published a datasheet for Android and iOS