What Are You Doing Right Now
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Just got to the hotel in Miami. Now to get the car ready to sell.
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Unboxing and setting up this many Chromebooks.
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Causing headaches because I'm completing assigned tasks properly. Have someone retiring at the end of the month, and was asked to create an "archive" of his Office 365 email. Did the normal ediscovery search and download, but the download kicked an alert to the account owner (in this case the police chief for the village).
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@obsolesce said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
The numbers are out and you can see the effectiveness of the vaccines.
Yes, and it's only really effective against serious infections. Some of the vaccines (remember, whole regions of the world can't get the really effective ones and no children can - nor can people pick which they get) are only like 65% effective against infection, but nearly 100% effective in stopping a serious complication from infection.
So stopping the infection isn't even on the radar realistically. The name of the game is lowering infection rates to allow hospitals to have capacity while stopping serious infections to allow people to live and hopefully recover.
“In the United States, vaccines were 90% effective against any infection in nearly 4,000 health care workers, and 94% effective against hospitalizations from COVID-19 in an evaluation across 24 hospitals in 14 states,”
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Move is about 80% done. Finally have a functioning workstation setup in the second bedroom (office).
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In Fort Lauderdale hold up in the hotel. Sold our car this morning. So just waiting for Monday to role around so that we can board our plane.
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@mr-jones said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Unboxing and setting up this many Chromebooks.
That's a whle lotta chromebook!
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Flight got delayed. 3PM tomorrow instead of 10am.
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monday morning, just, almost midday. overcast and dull. winter is preparing.
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@siringo said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
monday morning, just, almost midday. overcast and dull. winter is preparing.
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Trying to figure the mechanism being used to activate the licenses for our Windows endpoints.
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@eddiejennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Trying to figure the mechanism being used to activate the licenses for our Windows endpoints.
KMS?
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@dafyre said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@eddiejennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Trying to figure the mechanism being used to activate the licenses for our Windows endpoints.
KMS?
Supposedly. But the VM that should be the KMS server isn't listening on tcp 1688, and the only configuration I can find on it is actually an AD object for a single license with an ambiguous name. The answer will involve me polling various people to try to piece together what people have tried to configure in the past.
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@eddiejennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@dafyre said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@eddiejennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Trying to figure the mechanism being used to activate the licenses for our Windows endpoints.
KMS?
Supposedly. But the VM that should be the KMS server isn't listening on tcp 1688, and the only configuration I can find on it is actually an AD object for a single license with an ambiguous name. The answer will involve me polling various people to try to piece together what people have tried to configure in the past.
nmap -p 1688 10.10.10.0/24
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@jaredbusch said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@eddiejennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@dafyre said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@eddiejennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Trying to figure the mechanism being used to activate the licenses for our Windows endpoints.
KMS?
Supposedly. But the VM that should be the KMS server isn't listening on tcp 1688, and the only configuration I can find on it is actually an AD object for a single license with an ambiguous name. The answer will involve me polling various people to try to piece together what people have tried to configure in the past.
nmap -p 1688 10.10.10.0/24
Believe it or not, it would probably take less time to poll people than to get approval to run
nmap
, but that's a good idea. -
Look through DNS for an SRV record that starts out like this
_vlmcs._tcp.domain.com
in case you missed it, there is a "." between _vlmcs and _tcp
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@eddiejennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jaredbusch said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@eddiejennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@dafyre said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@eddiejennings said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Trying to figure the mechanism being used to activate the licenses for our Windows endpoints.
KMS?
Supposedly. But the VM that should be the KMS server isn't listening on tcp 1688, and the only configuration I can find on it is actually an AD object for a single license with an ambiguous name. The answer will involve me polling various people to try to piece together what people have tried to configure in the past.
nmap -p 1688 10.10.10.0/24
Believe it or not, it would probably take less time to poll people than to get approval to run
nmap
, but that's a good idea.What's your position? just interested why you wouldn't be able to use nmap?
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@stuartjordan said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
What's your position? just interested why you wouldn't be able to use nmap?
Federal government contractor (company for which I work is servicing a federal government contract). I’d have to see if nmap is on my team’s approved app list. If it isn’t, there’s red tape to go through to get it approved.
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@eddiejennings Ok that makes sense, If you explain i'm sure they might be ok. But they may be funny with running nmap. But nmap is quite powerful and and can be run with scripts to find potential CVE's. Which ain't a bad thing tbh. all networks should be scanned.