Great video. Just want to add, the reason why the GPO didn’t show up at 10:11 is because you initially ran cmd as admin and it pulled up the GPO applied to the user account “administrator”. The GPO in question was a user specific policy so when you ran cmd without admin it showed GPOs applied to the user account Pat.Infosec as well. Hope that makes sense
Nice as always. Yet how come and you demonstrated a somehow old way of doing this? In case this video won t have a follow up, I believe this way is more modernized and with less bugs. Win Serv 2012 R2 was the last OS I ve seen this method used.
Great video. Just want to add, the reason why the GPO didn’t show up at 10:11 is because you initially ran cmd as admin and it pulled up the GPO applied to the user account “administrator”. The GPO in question was a user specific policy so when you ran cmd without admin it showed GPOs applied to the user account Pat.Infosec as well. Hope that makes sense
Thank you so much I really appreciate that. Yeah I realize that after the fact, lol. But I appreciate your insight. Thank you so much.
is there a way to make gpupdate /force without user having to do it?
Nice as always. Yet how come and you demonstrated a somehow old way of doing this? In case this video won t have a follow up, I believe this way is more modernized and with less bugs. Win Serv 2012 R2 was the last OS I ve seen this method used.
Yeah you can do them a few ways. That’s the way I do it when I was a system admin. It’s my way I was doing it.
Great video. Thank you
Great video. I do have a question about the batch file. Why does it not matter that you used "p" as the drive in the script? Thanks 😊
Awesome thank you so much for checking it out. I did P for Pat. Lol. it doesn’t really matter what you put
Thanks
No problem
thx
Can you give an explanation like this, but each user receives a separate network drive and all users in ou get a network drive and a shared drive?