![]() This, again, is not a PolicyPak function. How do we do that? We know that Eddie is in “West Sales Admins.” So we’re going to “Create a GPO in this domain, and link it here” and call it “West Sales Admins cannot use PP JRM.” Then we click “Edit” on this Group Policy Object. Again, now we’re back on your machine and we’re going to modify Eddie’s behavior. The MMC console is just looking at all times to see if the flag is set to receive this policy, and it will do the work. The other side note is that the target machine doesn’t need the PolicyPak client-side extension. We have another video on how to manage our ADMX templates, but it’s as quick as downloading them from the bits, taking the policy definitions, and putting them in your Microsoft central store. Let’s say I wanted to remove his ability to do “Java Rules Manager.” How would I do that? We have ADMX templates that will control this. ![]() So you can see that right now he has all of them. Maybe for Eddie what you want to do is say for Group Policy Objects that Eddie creates that Eddie can only see some of the PolicyPak nodes. Maybe for Eddie you don’t want to do that. For instance, inside the MMC console here when you click on “PolicyPak” you see all the nodes here. ![]() When you click “Edit” on any given Group Policy Object maybe you want to see all the things PolicyPak can do. This is you on this machine on your management station, and this is your buddy Eddie. In this vid, I’m going to show you how you can trim what you see in the PolicyPak Management Console. ![]() This is Jeremy Moskowitz, former 15-year Group Policy MVP and Founder of PolicyPak Software. If you want to hide some of the PolicyPak MMC items for your OU admins, this is how to do it.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |