One way that a CMG is more complicated though is in the multiple possible requirements choices that you can use to fulfill the prerequisites. If you’re not paying attention to the details in the official documentation, it’s pretty easy to confuse the requirements, mistakenly conflate them, or miss an important condition.
The HKCU Registry Bridge On the River PowerShell.
This blog will show you the options you have when you need to deploy Hkey_Current_User […]
Remove all Local Admins!!
In this blog, I will show you how you could make sure when you are […]
My first blogpost :)
I have been thinking a lot about creating a website and to start blogging. The […]
Missing Update Folder Within an Update Package
I did some quick cleanup of the update packages in my lab the other day […]
Boundary and Boundary Group Import and Export
Five simple PowerShell one-liners to export and import boundaries and boundary groups from and to a Configuration Manager site.
Building a Windows 7 Image (Revisited)
This is a follow-up to a previous post: Building a Windows 7 Image. Why you […]
Four Types of Wake-on-Lan
There are four types of Wake on Lan (WoL) currently in System Center Configuration Manager (ConfigMgr/SCCM). Each operates differently and must be accounted for at the network level for them to work.
Command Synchronicity
Although Synchronicity is one one of the best songs ever from one of the best […]
What Automatic Deployment Rules Actually Do
A common point of confusion for folks just starting with System Center Configuration Manager (ConfigMgr […]