![]() None of those technologies exist outside of Windows, with the result of all that knowledge not being applicable to say, macOS and iOS or Android. For windows you'd be using intune with MEM and going through a legacy stack of MOFs, registry keys, ADMX extensions, GPO conversions and only then maybe agent-based DSC. If you also keep track of what JAMF already does for you (be it an application catalog, native support for MDM features instead of having to manually hack around with mobileconfigs or user management), those features would essentially save enough time to warrant the cost.Įven if technically similar goals could be achieved with Intune, it's not like all other admins would suddenly also be able to do that since the platform is just not the same. As others have posted, this probably has to start with what you currently have setup (policies, scripts, deployments) and how those would (or wouldn't) translate to Intune. TLDR Intune is actually quite good and extremely cost effective if you’re 100% Azure.Įvidence would be based on user experience, effort to make that experience happen, and features that JAMF has that Intune doesn't have. Device groups can take time to populate when onboarding causing issues. ![]() Scope polices to user groups vs device groups. The cost benefit from Jamf was minimal and patching sucks ass. Prepare to get really good at writing custom plists.Īgain if you’re already 100% Azure and use I tune for windows I would stick with Intune. If everyone has admin and you’re just using MCAS to block shadow IT then it’s fine.ĭeploying custom apps is a huge pia. Now here is the caveat, I wouldn’t run or rely on Intune to distribute packages, especially to standard users. Plenty of custom shell scripts online to get you started. Intune + compliance policies are amazing for security and compliance audits.īuilt in o365 apps, defender, device restrictions etc. Intune macOS patch policies are actually really impressive. For the most part Intune manages macOS fairly well if you’re fully invested in o365 and have an e5 license. Haven’t found anything directly comparing and contrasting the two.Īs someone who’s used Intune to its max prior to switching to Jamf I would say yes. I have done some research on intune and from what I hear it’s not the best. I was told I would need to make a very strong case if I would like to see JAMF stay so I’m just looking to gather as much evidence as I can. If you have some experience using intune or using both I would greatly appreciate your feedback. We are a heavy windows shop with a small Mac user base so I’m the only admin working on this. We have about 250 macs with many more on the way. Right now we are a JAMF shop that I have spent the past 6 month painstaking building up and enrolling all of the company macs (which were unmanaged when I stepped into this role). The price point seems to be the driving factor on this. ![]() But there are some whispers that the macs will be coming along as well. Right now my company is in the beginning steps of migrating their windows environment into intune, which I think is great. Looking for some opinions here as I’m being put into a tough situation.
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