User migration to azure
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We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
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@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
That being said, Microsoft have User State Migration Tool, USMT, for moving user data.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/deployment/usmt/usmt-overview -
We used https://www.forensit.com/domain-migration.html to do profile migrations; it worked OK but the big pain was it would not move Outlook profiles correctly and we had to rebuild Outlook for some of our users
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@jt1001001 said in User migration to azure:
We used https://www.forensit.com/domain-migration.html to do profile migrations; it worked OK but the big pain was it would not move Outlook profiles correctly and we had to rebuild Outlook for some of our users
Yea I've used this in the past for migrations and haven't had any issues. Actually have a new customer that is wanting to get setup with some central administration of things and this was on the list to use.
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@lilyleiden
There are some imaging options that have built-in profile migration capabilities as well, such as SmartDeploy. Starting fresh while preserving their data could be a workable compromise, perhaps. -
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
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@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops, upgrades etc will be reset everything to company default.
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@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
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@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
I think it makes the most sense. I've never myself received a new replacement PC that had any settings retained from my previous one.
Also any kind of serious problem with the PC and it would have been reimaged with nothing retained.
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@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
I think it makes the most sense. I've never myself received a new replacement PC that had any settings retained from my previous one.
True, same here.
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@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
Wondering what others do for users bookmarks? Do you just have them create and use their own Google/Firefox/Microsoft account so they follow the user?
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@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
Wondering what others do for users bookmarks? Do you just have them create and use their own Google/Firefox/Microsoft account so they follow the user?
They can sign in and use their corporate email to sync in the web browser.
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@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
Wondering what others do for users bookmarks? Do you just have them create and use their own Google/Firefox/Microsoft account so they follow the user?
I try to be nice to my users and backup those things - I tell them to move their desktop items somewhere else (I never redirect the desktop - that causes so many issues).
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@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
Wondering what others do for users bookmarks? Do you just have them create and use their own Google/Firefox/Microsoft account so they follow the user?
They can sign in and use their corporate email to sync in the web browser.
huh - a PITA making users make three separate accounts (one for each browser) based on their corporate account... but doable.
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@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
Wondering what others do for users bookmarks? Do you just have them create and use their own Google/Firefox/Microsoft account so they follow the user?
They can sign in and use their corporate email to sync in the web browser.
huh - a PITA making users make three separate accounts (one for each browser) based on their corporate account... but doable.
Or use browser profiles.
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@scottalanmiller said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
Wondering what others do for users bookmarks? Do you just have them create and use their own Google/Firefox/Microsoft account so they follow the user?
They can sign in and use their corporate email to sync in the web browser.
huh - a PITA making users make three separate accounts (one for each browser) based on their corporate account... but doable.
Or use browser profiles.
what? How does that setup syncing?
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@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
Wondering what others do for users bookmarks? Do you just have them create and use their own Google/Firefox/Microsoft account so they follow the user?
They can sign in and use their corporate email to sync in the web browser.
huh - a PITA making users make three separate accounts (one for each browser) based on their corporate account... but doable.
Three separate accounts for what? I only use one web browser for work, and only one work account, and have all my work bookmarks on that, and synced. Why would someone do all that on multiple browsers?
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@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
Wondering what others do for users bookmarks? Do you just have them create and use their own Google/Firefox/Microsoft account so they follow the user?
They can sign in and use their corporate email to sync in the web browser.
huh - a PITA making users make three separate accounts (one for each browser) based on their corporate account... but doable.
Three separate accounts for what? I only use one web browser for work, and only one work account, and have all my work bookmarks on that, and synced. Why would someone do all that on multiple browsers?
Government Healthcare websites. That is why. Medicaid (per state), Medicare (per jurisdiction), Insurance websites, different EMR websites, etc... etc... etc... etc...
Yes, it is a BIG PITA. Heck, up until last year, Eclinical EMR (version based) still wanted IE and refused to use Chrome/FireFox/Edge. It can now be used on Chrome/Edge but doesn't like FF, yet for Medicaid, they like FF better than Chrome/Edge. UGH
(Just a little bitter....)
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@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
Wondering what others do for users bookmarks? Do you just have them create and use their own Google/Firefox/Microsoft account so they follow the user?
They can sign in and use their corporate email to sync in the web browser.
huh - a PITA making users make three separate accounts (one for each browser) based on their corporate account... but doable.
Three separate accounts for what? I only use one web browser for work, and only one work account, and have all my work bookmarks on that, and synced. Why would someone do all that on multiple browsers?
Government Healthcare websites. That is why. Medicaid (per state), Medicare (per jurisdiction), Insurance websites, different EMR websites, etc... etc... etc... etc...
Yes, it is a BIG PITA. Heck, up until last year, Eclinical EMR (version based) still wanted IE and refused to use Chrome/FireFox/Edge. It can now be used on Chrome/Edge but doesn't like FF, yet for Medicaid, they like FF better than Chrome/Edge. UGH
(Just a little bitter....)
Even in those cases, if I had a need to visit those websites on my work device with my work account, that would be the exception to the rule. I would continue to ONLY use Edge, with only my work account set up for sync. And in the weird cases I ever had to visit one of those sites that only support IE, I'd just copy/paste the password in there from the saved passwords through Edge or LastPass (whichever you'd use).
There's no way I'd set up a profile in IE for any reason, unless forced to.
The alternative to signing into the web browser to sync is so much worse, even in the off chance you chose to use 4 web browsers at the same time, and sign into them all with your work account to sync. Any other method is going to end up costing way more effort in the end anyways.
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@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Obsolesce said in User migration to azure:
@pmoncho said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@Dashrender said in User migration to azure:
@Pete-S said in User migration to azure:
@lilyleiden said in User migration to azure:
We just tested migrating a small batch of test users to our new Azure tenant.
While migrating the PC/user account was no problem, the fact that people get a completely blank user profile, certainly was a showstopper!!
Many of our users has had their AD profile for years, even a decade and has a lot of individual settings, ways to work, shortcuts, quick links, favorites/browser cached passwords etc. and they loose all that.
Management has currently halted the process due to the protests.So I am on the lookout for a way to link/migrate the old profile/profile settings, when Azure joining the PC?
I would use this as an opportunity to remove unneeded customizations and old ways of doing things and introduce new ways of working instead.
For instance is it really wise to rely on browser cached passwords? To me that's a signal that you need to look over you password management policy. Maybe your users need a real password manager or setup SSO to apps they're using.
I'm really on board with this! We don't migrate when people get new machines, that said - we have few users that do much customization to their setup...
Yes and it's also question of setting the right expectations. For instance saying: IT allows users to customize their desktops but will not provide support for it. New machines, reimaged desktops etc will be reset to company default.
I do this - I don't support end user shortcuts to their desktop. If you figure out how to get it - or get others around you to do it for you, fine... but IT does not support your shortcuts.
Wondering what others do for users bookmarks? Do you just have them create and use their own Google/Firefox/Microsoft account so they follow the user?
They can sign in and use their corporate email to sync in the web browser.
huh - a PITA making users make three separate accounts (one for each browser) based on their corporate account... but doable.
Three separate accounts for what? I only use one web browser for work, and only one work account, and have all my work bookmarks on that, and synced. Why would someone do all that on multiple browsers?
Government Healthcare websites. That is why. Medicaid (per state), Medicare (per jurisdiction), Insurance websites, different EMR websites, etc... etc... etc... etc...
Yes, it is a BIG PITA. Heck, up until last year, Eclinical EMR (version based) still wanted IE and refused to use Chrome/FireFox/Edge. It can now be used on Chrome/Edge but doesn't like FF, yet for Medicaid, they like FF better than Chrome/Edge. UGH
(Just a little bitter....)
Even in those cases, if I had a need to visit those websites on my work device with my work account, that would be the exception to the rule. I would continue to ONLY use Edge, with only my work account set up for sync. And in the weird cases I ever had to visit one of those sites that only support IE, I'd just copy/paste the password in there from the saved passwords through Edge or LastPass (whichever you'd use).
My current user use KeePass and I work with them to open the URL from KeePass so that will limit their Bookmarks. Doesn't work all the time but the power users are good.
The alternative to signing into the web browser to sync is so much worse, even in the off chance you chose to use 4 web browsers at the same time, and sign into them all with your work account to sync. Any other method is going to end up costing way more effort in the end anyways.
I agree. The option I use is on occasion, I have my users export their Bookmarks to the Documents folder. This works most of the time.