Windows server 2003 afp lion
David AppRiver - your suggestion is for non-managed machines and not how this is normally done. If you want to leverage the Mac server, then you can use what's called Dual-Directory, or "Golden Triangle" by some. It will prompt to create a mobile profile, Click "yes".
IT will allow you to sort of modify your sync folders when logging on and off. There is more info on that site regarding using local MCX to manage some of the sync stuff. I been using it for short time, and seems to work for the most part. Sometimes though it will complain about 2 different files even though I have not modified anything. Most run in fear at the mere mention of this. So "support" capability options will be most drastically reduced if OS X clients are bound to AD and that's it that's all.
No, the whitepaper is really an extremely broad overview. Some might use ExtremeZ-IP on their Windows server highly acknowledged and commonly recommended for Windows-only server environments wishing to improve file-services for Mac clients , or netatalk on a Linux server, but that's far more complicated than the discussion here. You need to specify smb if that is what is being used for the file-service for home directories.
Sign up using Email and Password. Post as a guest Name. Email Required, but never shown. The Overflow Blog. Podcast Making Agile work for data science. Stack Gives Back Featured on Meta. New post summary designs on greatest hits now, everywhere else eventually. Related 5. That will make using Active Directory logins much easier.
Enable the Allow Administration By option; this will make anyone in the enterprise or domain admins group a local administrator on that Mac. Next, click the Bind button and enter in your Active Directory username and password. Click OK and, after a few seconds, you should be done.
This drove me nuts! Mine is called Outbound, as shown below. However, if you send mail out to an external address, […]. Well for the larger businesses out there, this may not be a useful tip. But for those of us that support small networks, like less than 50 or even 10 systems, utilizing shares on workstations is sometimes needed.
For example, I have servers in most all of my networks, and […]. So you went to add a new address to a user account in Active Directory, and you got an error that this address already exists? Sucks huh? On your domain root in AD Users […].
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