{"id":65883,"date":"2023-01-24T12:00:00","date_gmt":"2023-01-24T17:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/74d2948405.nxcli.io\/resources\/71-igel-weekly-how-to-deploy-igel-os-firmware-and-custom-partitions-via-azure-sftp\/"},"modified":"2026-01-29T12:27:49","modified_gmt":"2026-01-29T17:27:49","slug":"71-igel-weekly-how-to-deploy-igel-os-firmware-and-custom-partitions-via-azure-sftp","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/xentegra.com\/fr\/resources\/71-igel-weekly-how-to-deploy-igel-os-firmware-and-custom-partitions-via-azure-sftp\/","title":{"rendered":"71: IGEL Weekly: How to deploy IGEL OS firmware and custom partitions via Azure sftp"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><iframe loading=\"lazy\" src=\"https:\/\/www.buzzsprout.com\/1555814\/episodes\/12103374-igel-weekly-how-to-deploy-igel-os-firmware-and-custom-partitions-via-azure-sftp?iframe=true\" scrolling=\"no\" width=\"100%\" height=\"200\" frameborder=\"0\" style=\"width: 100%;height: 200px\"><\/iframe><\/p>\n<p><b><em>Written by Edwin ten Haaf, IGEL Community Member<\/em><\/b><\/p>\n<p>More and more of our IGEL customers want to facilitate work from anywhere.<\/p>\n<p>In the office they were familiar with using <a href=\"https:\/\/www.linkedin.com\/feed\/hashtag\/igelos\">#IGELOS<\/a> driven devices.\u00a0 By providing end users with notebooks running <a href=\"https:\/\/www.igel.com\/work-from-anywhere\/\">IGEL OS<\/a> or <a href=\"https:\/\/www.igel.com\/udpocket\/\">UD Pocket<\/a>(IGEL\u00a0 on a stick) user can safely and easily connect to their virtual\u00a0 workplace.<\/p>\n<p>The management backend (UMS) is managing these devices in the\u00a0 local network.\u00a0 connect to ICG and the\u00a0 management backend connects to ICG and the devices can be managed as if\u00a0 they were local.\u00a0 \u00a0<\/p>\n<p>If you&#8217;re ICG is installed and configured well you can now manage\u00a0 you&#8217;re devices outside the office. Deploy and update profiles, support\u00a0 users with shadow functionality. One important part that has to be\u00a0 configured separately is the distribution of IGEL OS firmware and Custom\u00a0 Partitions (Additional Software running on the IGEL OS like MS Teams and\u00a0 Zoom)<\/p>\n<p>For this you need to point you&#8217;re devices to a remote https\/sftp\u00a0 location. Please read <a href=\"https:\/\/www.linkedin.com\/pulse\/use-sftp-storage-azure-deploy-igel-os-firmware-custom-edwin-ten-haaf\/\">ici<\/a> how<\/p>\n<p>Animateur : Andy Whiteside<br \/>Co-animateur : S\u00e9bastien Perusat<\/p>\n<div class=\"transcript\">\n<p><!--block-->WEBVTT<\/p>\n<p>1<br \/>00:00:02.620 &#8211;&gt; 00:00:21.349<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Hello, everyone! And Welcome to episode. 71 of I Jo Weekly. I&#8217;m your host, Andy White Side i&#8217;ve got a couple of guests with me today. today is January thirteenth. 2,023. said we, were just talking about making sure we get the right additions with the right dates and for the video and everything. And, I&#8217;ve made myself train to myself to say the dates<\/p>\n<p>2<br \/>00:00:21.360 &#8211;&gt; 00:00:32.469<br \/>Andy Whiteside: at the beginning of these things, so that there&#8217;s no question as to when it was recorded and recorded. we&#8217;ve got Moe and Khan Mo: it&#8217;s the global See global CTO of integrity. Mo. And how&#8217;s it going<\/p>\n<p>3<br \/>00:00:33.080 &#8211;&gt; 00:00:34.990<br \/>moin: going? Great, Andy<\/p>\n<p>4<br \/>00:00:35.280 &#8211;&gt; 00:00:39.569<br \/>Andy Whiteside: and I call you global CTO, cause I always have to ask, Where are you at the moment?<\/p>\n<p>5<br \/>00:00:41.080 &#8211;&gt; 00:00:58.760<br \/>moin: I am on driving back from airport after doing why compromise a jolly, went in Vancouver, which was really great to see customers. but to be To my not surprise, we were expecting<\/p>\n<p>6<br \/>00:00:58.780 &#8211;&gt; 00:01:03.449<br \/>moin: this to be a low attendance, and happen to be there.<\/p>\n<p>7<br \/>00:01:03.490 &#8211;&gt; 00:01:09.690<br \/>moin: Very good customers. we had, more than a dozen customers show up, and<\/p>\n<p>8<br \/>00:01:09.780 &#8211;&gt; 00:01:26.029<br \/>moin: We had very, very interesting discussion about that, their roadmap and security being the top of their mind. We we just spent it used. It was supposed to be 4&nbsp;h event, and we end up doing it all the event they were. They just couldn&#8217;t stop talking<\/p>\n<p>9<br \/>00:01:26.440 &#8211;&gt; 00:01:28.029<br \/>Andy Whiteside: so moan.<\/p>\n<p>10<br \/>00:01:28.070 &#8211;&gt; 00:01:43.299<br \/>Andy Whiteside: I&#8217;ve got some. Why compromise workshops coming up where we&#8217;re going to partner in this case with Lenovo, and then eventually, Lg. As well, and actually give out devices. And we&#8217;re going to have people do hands on labs, and then also have these conversations. So security was the the primary<\/p>\n<p>11<br \/>00:01:43.410 &#8211;&gt; 00:01:45.820<br \/>Andy Whiteside: talking point, but I bet there were others as well.<\/p>\n<p>12<br \/>00:01:46.520 &#8211;&gt; 00:01:51.000<br \/>moin: There were. There were others as well, but with a targeted<\/p>\n<p>13<br \/>00:01:51.350 &#8211;&gt; 00:01:59.959<br \/>moin: run somewhere, attack happening for most of my customers. They were really really concerned, and one of the reasons why they<\/p>\n<p>14<br \/>00:02:00.040 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:12.280<br \/>moin: they&#8217;re looking for idol is to secure their endpoints. and that cost was one of the factors. But security is where they that pulled them all into that room.<\/p>\n<p>15<br \/>00:02:12.320 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:20.360<br \/>Andy Whiteside: So so i&#8217;m a little bullish on this comment, and maybe it&#8217;s because of my background and where I come from. But if you&#8217;re still running windows on the endpoint by default.<\/p>\n<p>16<br \/>00:02:20.730 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:22.220<br \/>Andy Whiteside: You&#8217;re setting yourself up<\/p>\n<p>17<br \/>00:02:22.300 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:24.379<br \/>Andy Whiteside: for a security breach on the endpoint<\/p>\n<p>18<br \/>00:02:24.970 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:27.770<br \/>Andy Whiteside: period. No matter how you manage it, try to secure it you<\/p>\n<p>19<br \/>00:02:27.990 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:30.240<br \/>Andy Whiteside: you&#8217;re you&#8217;re set up for that to app<\/p>\n<p>20<br \/>00:02:32.800 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:37.510<br \/>moin: that is correct. And and and this is where we had few universities.<\/p>\n<p>21<br \/>00:02:37.630 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:43.180<br \/>moin: and they all mentioned that, having their staff<\/p>\n<p>22<br \/>00:02:43.300 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:47.650<br \/>moin: take those devices home, and of being windows devices<\/p>\n<p>23<br \/>00:02:47.700 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:50.380<br \/>moin: those where the entry point for ransom, where<\/p>\n<p>24<br \/>00:02:50.530 &#8211;&gt; 00:02:56.960<br \/>moin: in in both the cases now for for for 2 different institute that we spoke to.<\/p>\n<p>25<br \/>00:02:57.260 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:04.140<br \/>Andy Whiteside: I I don&#8217;t have these numbers, but I I bet it&#8217;s a significant number. I would love to see. Get your thought and steps. Thoughts on this. How much?<\/p>\n<p>26<br \/>00:03:04.280 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:09.759<br \/>Andy Whiteside: How much malware! Ransom we are Bad stuff, do you think is sitting in rest just waiting<\/p>\n<p>27<br \/>00:03:10.120 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:12.350<br \/>Andy Whiteside: to be told to execute<\/p>\n<p>28<br \/>00:03:12.910 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:16.649<br \/>Andy Whiteside: a percentage of windows devices out there.<\/p>\n<p>29<br \/>00:03:17.620 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:37.399<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I would say 10 to 20%. It might be something which might be realistic, even if we really don&#8217;t know which kind of memory would be. Is it something which will be active, or we&#8217;ll just steal data. We&#8217;ll try to to manipulate your operating system we try to propagate in the company, so I will differentiate a little bit, but also 10 to 20%, something which might be realistic<\/p>\n<p>30<br \/>00:03:37.410 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:42.500<br \/>Andy Whiteside: and anything above, you know. Point one would be scary 10 to 20.<\/p>\n<p>31<br \/>00:03:43.120 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:44.519<br \/>Andy Whiteside: I don&#8217;t.<\/p>\n<p>32<br \/>00:03:44.580 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:47.080<br \/>Andy Whiteside: I mean that&#8217;s just extremely<\/p>\n<p>33<br \/>00:03:47.270 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:48.230<br \/>Andy Whiteside: scary<\/p>\n<p>34<br \/>00:03:48.440 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:54.190<br \/>Andy Whiteside: to think that that much 10 to 20% of all those windows Pcs. Out there are just waiting and rest<\/p>\n<p>35<br \/>00:03:54.520 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:55.959<br \/>Andy Whiteside: to attack something<\/p>\n<p>36<br \/>00:03:56.680 &#8211;&gt; 00:03:59.249<br \/>Andy Whiteside: that they can get their hands on is<\/p>\n<p>37<br \/>00:04:00.060 &#8211;&gt; 00:04:08.599<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: the fun Fact that I know, if you got such kind of information also in North America. But we had an interesting podcast in Central European<\/p>\n<p>38<br \/>00:04:08.770 &#8211;&gt; 00:04:11.710<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Time zone a couple of days ago on Golem.<\/p>\n<p>39<br \/>00:04:12.580 &#8211;&gt; 00:04:16.890<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: The fun fact is that one specific command server, which.<\/p>\n<p>40<br \/>00:04:17.220 &#8211;&gt; 00:04:22.400<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: more like the commenser which will send out the command to all the male, we&#8217;re infected PC.<\/p>\n<p>41<br \/>00:04:22.550 &#8211;&gt; 00:04:23.480<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Just<\/p>\n<p>42<br \/>00:04:23.720 &#8211;&gt; 00:04:43.570<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: got lost by the administrators, so by the attackers, because they had made a small change. But it didn&#8217;t thought about hey? Which kind of consequences it may have on the command Server. The fun fact is, a commencer is not dead, so there are malware also out there which will never be activated anymore in the future because the comment is dead.<\/p>\n<p>43<br \/>00:04:43.580 &#8211;&gt; 00:04:50.550<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So that&#8217;s something which I found pretty funny, because that means that even hackers are doing and doing mistakes. Yeah, make them a little bit, humans.<\/p>\n<p>44<br \/>00:04:50.690 &#8211;&gt; 00:05:01.740<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Well, that&#8217;s a that&#8217;s an interesting view on digital transformation happening where even the the bad stuff has transformed to the point where whoever was in control of it or the system in control of it no longer exist.<\/p>\n<p>45<br \/>00:05:02.230 &#8211;&gt; 00:05:03.210<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Exactly.<\/p>\n<p>46<br \/>00:05:03.460 &#8211;&gt; 00:05:08.410<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: It&#8217;s a commander control. So now I found the time back, command and control so on.<\/p>\n<p>47<br \/>00:05:08.960 &#8211;&gt; 00:05:13.710<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Well, that was the voice of Sebastian presets. Sebastian. How&#8217;s it going?<\/p>\n<p>48<br \/>00:05:14.080 &#8211;&gt; 00:05:25.089<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: It&#8217;s going good, all the best for 2,023 for our listeners. I know we are a little bit late on that, but still I wish you all the best for you and your families, and I hope you had a great Christmas time and New Year&#8217;s Eve<\/p>\n<p>49<br \/>00:05:25.200 &#8211;&gt; 00:05:29.769<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: so happy to be there again, and I hope we will cover a great topic today.<\/p>\n<p>50<br \/>00:05:30.060 &#8211;&gt; 00:05:39.910<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Well, I was told by somebody yesterday. It&#8217;s okay to say Happy New Year up until the middle of January, and we&#8217;re almost there, so we&#8217;re not late. We&#8217;re not late.<\/p>\n<p>51<br \/>00:05:42.320 &#8211;&gt; 00:05:58.450<br \/>Andy Whiteside: yeah, let&#8217;s let&#8217;s jump into the topic. Oh, no, before we do that. I&#8217;ve got it. I got a ping my marketing people you mentioned some folks we&#8217;ll. I&#8217;ll use the word complaining and rightfully so on the Igl community that we reference the video side of these podcasts. A lot.<\/p>\n<p>52<br \/>00:05:58.470 &#8211;&gt; 00:06:02.450<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Those are not up to date on this integral Youtube Channel.<\/p>\n<p>53<br \/>00:06:02.500 &#8211;&gt; 00:06:04.549<br \/>Andy Whiteside: You want to highlight what happened there?<\/p>\n<p>54<br \/>00:06:05.430 &#8211;&gt; 00:06:15.550<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Just a small thing. I mean, we&#8217;re putting a lot of efforts, especially you, on the descent. Take our side to put all the audio components together, and we are talking a lot, but at the same time<\/p>\n<p>55<br \/>00:06:15.660 &#8211;&gt; 00:06:28.969<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: you are always a recording, also your screen. So you are seeing my ugly face and some interesting content on the screen, and the interesting content on the screen is shared on Youtube, on Agile weekly podcast. If I remember right at the Youtube Channel.<\/p>\n<p>56<br \/>00:06:29.050 &#8211;&gt; 00:06:42.199<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and we are missing some episodes there. So I just wanted to say for the people who are listening through bus proud or apple podcast, and so on. There is also a video part of of the podcast as you can reach it on on Youtube.<\/p>\n<p>57<br \/>00:06:42.630 &#8211;&gt; 00:06:48.270<br \/>Andy Whiteside: and we like to think we cover the topic well through. You know the conversation.<\/p>\n<p>58<br \/>00:06:48.290 &#8211;&gt; 00:06:50.530<br \/>Andy Whiteside: But there are certain nuggets.<\/p>\n<p>59<br \/>00:06:50.700 &#8211;&gt; 00:06:52.490<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Did it make sense to<\/p>\n<p>60<br \/>00:06:52.510 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:02.380<br \/>Andy Whiteside: to see the video? And and maybe that&#8217;s the the the key piece that someone&#8217;s missing to help them understand exactly the topic. And where we&#8217;re going with that coverage.<\/p>\n<p>61<br \/>00:07:03.520 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:06.280<br \/>Andy Whiteside: plus you get to see me with my<\/p>\n<p>62<br \/>00:07:06.620 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:13.569<br \/>Andy Whiteside: son&#8217;s gaming headset on 7 to a while ago that I must be doing twitch a little later this afternoon.<\/p>\n<p>63<br \/>00:07:14.880 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:18.420<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: looking to you, seeing you playing a fortnight or something like that.<\/p>\n<p>64<br \/>00:07:18.790 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:19.840<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Hi,<\/p>\n<p>65<br \/>00:07:19.920 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:26.529<br \/>Andy Whiteside: I hide a set of headset. I I had some headsets in my wife&#8217;s office, so that when I end up working from her office at home.<\/p>\n<p>66<br \/>00:07:28.580 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:30.920<br \/>Andy Whiteside: I can have a a fell safe<\/p>\n<p>67<br \/>00:07:31.070 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:32.629<br \/>Andy Whiteside: in case I can&#8217;t find Mother<\/p>\n<p>68<br \/>00:07:32.660 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:33.660<br \/>headphones.<\/p>\n<p>69<br \/>00:07:34.170 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:41.369<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: And, by the way, i&#8217;m just and me just asking a question to our listeners. If you could give me a short feedback<\/p>\n<p>70<br \/>00:07:41.530 &#8211;&gt; 00:07:47.760<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: to Andy to myself, and as your community, or wherever because I changed my microphone a couple of days ago<\/p>\n<p>71<br \/>00:07:47.780 &#8211;&gt; 00:08:06.479<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I had already, I would say, a pretty good one in the past, but now I change to another model. It&#8217;s a shoe, together with a wave excel error device which I&#8217;m connecting to my automatic endpoint. So just in case, if your feedback is a better, if it was, then give me just a short feedback. I would be grateful for hearing what you are thinking<\/p>\n<p>72<br \/>00:08:06.760 &#8211;&gt; 00:08:07.539<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: that this<\/p>\n<p>73<br \/>00:08:07.670 &#8211;&gt; 00:08:16.680<br \/>Andy Whiteside: so so i&#8217;ll tell you it it sounds great now, so i&#8217;m not sure if that&#8217;s a result of an improvement, or just the same. But, your, your audio is great.<\/p>\n<p>74<br \/>00:08:17.020 &#8211;&gt; 00:08:17.990<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Okay, cool.<\/p>\n<p>75<br \/>00:08:18.020 &#8211;&gt; 00:08:19.690<br \/>Andy Whiteside: And I, is it wireless?<\/p>\n<p>76<br \/>00:08:20.330 &#8211;&gt; 00:08:32.649<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: No, not at all. I can just show it a little bit. No, it&#8217;s a cable wire by which is a standard audio interface. But the fun fact just telling maybe a secret to people who are listening to us.<\/p>\n<p>77<br \/>00:08:32.679 &#8211;&gt; 00:08:39.100<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Zoom has an extremely interesting feature. If you are doing some audio, and so I just forget to mention it to you, Andy.<\/p>\n<p>78<br \/>00:08:39.200 &#8211;&gt; 00:08:43.409<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: There is a feature which is called original sound for musicians.<\/p>\n<p>79<br \/>00:08:43.490 &#8211;&gt; 00:09:01.549<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So if you go into your Zoom client, go to your audio settings. You have a point which is called a zoom optimized audio, which is absolutely fine if you are travelling and so on. But you have also a point which is called original software magicians. And there you can say high fidelity, music, mode, and Asia cancellation and stero audio.<\/p>\n<p>80<br \/>00:09:01.560 &#8211;&gt; 00:09:19.969<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So you can tweak a little bit about the audio quality there, too, just giving our little hints that I found out and said, I want to pick on you real quick. But with the accident it sounds like you&#8217;re saying for magicians you&#8217;re talking about for musicians, musicians. Right? Sorry. No, that&#8217;s awesome. I can. What is the magicians have to do with this.<\/p>\n<p>81<br \/>00:09:21.150 &#8211;&gt; 00:09:40.169<br \/>Andy Whiteside: All right. let&#8217;s see any other housekeeping one to cover. we apologize guys, for not having more content over the holidays. It got busy, and it&#8217;s the time of year where companies are doing the conferences and kick off so it&#8217;s probably my fault more than anybody else. But excited to be ready to go for 2,023 and the team, as integr will will continue to<\/p>\n<p>82<br \/>00:09:40.180 &#8211;&gt; 00:09:45.169<br \/>Andy Whiteside: about this content. Any feedback you give us would be wildly appreciated.<\/p>\n<p>83<br \/>00:09:46.250 &#8211;&gt; 00:09:48.880<br \/>Andy Whiteside: okay,<\/p>\n<p>84<br \/>00:09:49.040 &#8211;&gt; 00:10:04.819<br \/>Andy Whiteside: I think what we&#8217;re covering with the video stuff real quick, is that? And I don&#8217;t know if I said this, but the the the integrity and the marketing team needs to we gotta step up and get some of these Itel videos updated onto our Youtube Channel, and I will make that request literally while we&#8217;re talking here now.<\/p>\n<p>85<br \/>00:10:04.830 &#8211;&gt; 00:10:20.269<br \/>Andy Whiteside: but, said we, every Other Week, we do a community podcast and ask that you bring a topic that you believe the community would like to hear, and something that you&#8217;ve worked on recently, and the one for today is from a post of yours from December thirteenth, 2,022, and I believe that&#8217;s gonna<\/p>\n<p>86<br \/>00:10:20.280 &#8211;&gt; 00:10:25.589<br \/>Andy Whiteside: tied back to a community member post which is the best way to learn about this stuff is through the community.<\/p>\n<p>87<br \/>00:10:25.660 &#8211;&gt; 00:10:35.930<br \/>Andy Whiteside: and that topic is how to deploy. Ig. OS. So the ideal operating system, firmware and custom partitions using via azure<\/p>\n<p>88<br \/>00:10:36.030 &#8211;&gt; 00:10:45.609<br \/>Andy Whiteside: S. Ftp. And i&#8217;m a huge fan of it. Guys not only saying the acronym, but explaining what it means that would be secure, file transport.<\/p>\n<p>89<br \/>00:10:45.740 &#8211;&gt; 00:10:47.860<br \/>Andy Whiteside: transport protocol, right?<\/p>\n<p>90<br \/>00:10:48.570 &#8211;&gt; 00:10:53.560<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Is it simple or secure? No, it&#8217;s secure.<\/p>\n<p>91<br \/>00:10:53.630 &#8211;&gt; 00:10:54.190<br \/>Oui, c'est vrai.<\/p>\n<p>92<br \/>00:10:55.290 &#8211;&gt; 00:11:02.540<br \/>Andy Whiteside: great. So set, if you want to kind of te us up and talk about Why, you wanted to highlight this one, and then we&#8217;ll jump into<\/p>\n<p>93<br \/>00:11:02.820 &#8211;&gt; 00:11:03.860<br \/>Andy Whiteside: what it does<\/p>\n<p>94<br \/>00:11:04.150 &#8211;&gt; 00:11:14.630<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: definitely. Yes. So first of all, a big shoot out to Evan 10 half, which wrote that article. He posted that on Linkedin and Positive, also on the urgent community side.<\/p>\n<p>95<br \/>00:11:14.770 &#8211;&gt; 00:11:31.350<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: And I said, like guys, honestly, if you are already covering such a great topic. Let me put that in our block article part of the adjectivity.com website, and if you go to prisoner it Here, at the end of the of the web page, you have the link to the original to the original post. So<\/p>\n<p>96<br \/>00:11:31.710 &#8211;&gt; 00:11:37.670<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: we already talked a lot in the past regarding our Ig Cloud Gateway, also known as Icg.<\/p>\n<p>97<br \/>00:11:37.730 &#8211;&gt; 00:11:43.219<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: which enables you to manage devices which are outside of your company network.<\/p>\n<p>98<br \/>00:11:43.740 &#8211;&gt; 00:11:52.499<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So just giving you I mean even if our listeners are knowing that for years, I guess are just telling that if you look at the ideal ecosystem<\/p>\n<p>99<br \/>00:11:52.620 &#8211;&gt; 00:11:57.329<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: we have the on-prem installation. You have devices inside of your company. But since Covid<\/p>\n<p>100<br \/>00:11:57.680 &#8211;&gt; 00:12:05.240<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: everything changed. People were working from everywhere, and so on and so on. So the devices out of the company are connected via VPN.<\/p>\n<p>101<br \/>00:12:05.450 &#8211;&gt; 00:12:21.340<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Still needed configurations, updates, etc. Etc. And that&#8217;s where the adjective gateway is connecting your device from outside to your on prem or azure wherever it&#8217;s located ums server. So it&#8217;s really just connector between both worlds<\/p>\n<p>102<br \/>00:12:22.070 &#8211;&gt; 00:12:27.540<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and the agile gateway is really is really a cool product. It enables a lot of features.<\/p>\n<p>103<br \/>00:12:27.820 &#8211;&gt; 00:12:30.359<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: but it&#8217;s lacking one major feature.<\/p>\n<p>104<br \/>00:12:30.640 &#8211;&gt; 00:12:37.120<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: maybe 2. But the topic of today is the firmware update and the custom partition, or roll out.<\/p>\n<p>105<br \/>00:12:37.180 &#8211;&gt; 00:12:40.700<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So as soon as you want to deploy bigger files.<\/p>\n<p>106<br \/>00:12:40.760 &#8211;&gt; 00:12:49.829<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: not one or 2&nbsp;MB, i&#8217;m really talking about 100, 200, and whatever upside the data that you want to exchange with the endpoint.<\/p>\n<p>107<br \/>00:12:50.140 &#8211;&gt; 00:12:52.599<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: You have to define an external<\/p>\n<p>108<br \/>00:12:52.730 &#8211;&gt; 00:12:55.239<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: server, an external resource where they<\/p>\n<p>109<br \/>00:12:55.490 &#8211;&gt; 00:12:57.520<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: device can download it from.<\/p>\n<p>110<br \/>00:12:57.630 &#8211;&gt; 00:13:02.610<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So Basically, we have 2 kind of of data which might be concerned by this<\/p>\n<p>111<br \/>00:13:02.700 &#8211;&gt; 00:13:04.049<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: azure West firmware<\/p>\n<p>112<br \/>00:13:04.280 &#8211;&gt; 00:13:18.229<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and custom partition. First of all, I do as firmware. We always recommend to stay as actual as possible. I know that the operating system is pretty stable, and it&#8217;s mostly working as soon as we started one time.<\/p>\n<p>113<br \/>00:13:19.050 &#8211;&gt; 00:13:27.570<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: but we have also security fixes. We have update from clients and so on. So you might miss something extremely important If you don&#8217;t update that device<\/p>\n<p>114<br \/>00:13:28.590 &#8211;&gt; 00:13:35.230<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: on the second hand cut some partitions, just explaining in 2 words, or maybe a few more, what custom petitions are.<\/p>\n<p>115<br \/>00:13:35.720 &#8211;&gt; 00:13:47.069<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: If you want to deploy an application, a piece of software to the audio operating system, which is not part of our firmware. So not part of our insulation, like informal times, the team&#8217;s client<\/p>\n<p>116<br \/>00:13:47.120 &#8211;&gt; 00:13:50.199<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: mit Chrome, because you are not allowed to use chromium or<\/p>\n<p>117<br \/>00:13:50.240 &#8211;&gt; 00:13:51.230<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and<\/p>\n<p>118<br \/>00:13:51.580 &#8211;&gt; 00:13:59.589<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: local zoom installation. That&#8217;s where the custom partition gives you the ability to deploy that software packet to the end.<\/p>\n<p>119<br \/>00:13:59.900 &#8211;&gt; 00:14:01.339<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Coming back to the topic.<\/p>\n<p>120<br \/>00:14:02.020 &#8211;&gt; 00:14:15.020<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: You can manage your device on Icg without having to call what we are talking about today, but as soon as you hit updates and custom petitions, we highly recommend to follow the guide. It is not a Nigel guide, but, like I said, from the aggregate community, so it&#8217;s<\/p>\n<p>121<br \/>00:14:15.150 &#8211;&gt; 00:14:19.010<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: something which we are testing also from our end and Edwin<\/p>\n<p>122<br \/>00:14:19.330 &#8211;&gt; 00:14:23.139<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: cover that from the Asia sftp part, so<\/p>\n<p>123<br \/>00:14:23.460 &#8211;&gt; 00:14:39.149<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: you can put our updates on any kind of web service. That&#8217;s an easy one. Just extract the zip file. I will talk about that a bit later. To a web service. Refer in a profile to that web service, and you are good to go.<\/p>\n<p>124<br \/>00:14:39.430 &#8211;&gt; 00:14:41.310<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: But if you want to<\/p>\n<p>125<br \/>00:14:41.470 &#8211;&gt; 00:14:53.440<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: have a load balancing, if you want to have a proper fight, transfer protocol. Not only Http or https download. That&#8217;s where the sftp makes definitely more sense, especially if you think about<\/p>\n<p>126<br \/>00:14:53.490 &#8211;&gt; 00:14:55.690<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: traffic limitation, and so on.<\/p>\n<p>127<br \/>00:14:56.190 &#8211;&gt; 00:15:11.139<br \/>Andy Whiteside: So said, let&#8217;s talk about this 3 ways. This is great. This is a great topic and something I&#8217;ve kind of been aware of and knew of, and anytime I needed it, I would just call one of your Esses and say, hey, give me access to your cloud, and i&#8217;ll pull it down real quick, and then you can take away my access.<\/p>\n<p>128<br \/>00:15:11.300 &#8211;&gt; 00:15:21.669<br \/>Andy Whiteside: so this is good to have this write up that tells us you know how to do it from an azure perspective tells me how to do it from azure perspective that way. I don&#8217;t have to be a mooch off some of your guys all the time.<\/p>\n<p>129<br \/>00:15:23.400 &#8211;&gt; 00:15:32.319<br \/>Andy Whiteside: if i&#8217;m got a brand new machine, and i&#8217;m either, you know, going to try to repurpose a machine that had something else on it before. It&#8217;s a brand new blank machine<\/p>\n<p>130<br \/>00:15:32.630 &#8211;&gt; 00:15:33.210<br \/>Andy Whiteside: that<\/p>\n<p>131<br \/>00:15:33.340 &#8211;&gt; 00:15:34.700<br \/>Andy Whiteside: having this<\/p>\n<p>132<br \/>00:15:35.410 &#8211;&gt; 00:15:42.059<br \/>Andy Whiteside: target in the cloud to pull down the the firmware from what? What would that look like<\/p>\n<p>133<br \/>00:15:43.120 &#8211;&gt; 00:15:48.960<br \/>Andy Whiteside: from an end user or administrator&#8217;s perspective. How would I start that process on the endpoint?<\/p>\n<p>134<br \/>00:15:50.530 &#8211;&gt; 00:16:02.330<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: On the endpoint? I would go, maybe a stick backwards. Usually the distribution of firmware updates is coordinate by the Us. Administrator. So by using a task or schedule tasks.<\/p>\n<p>135<br \/>00:16:02.550 &#8211;&gt; 00:16:07.940<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: by sending out a comment which is then applyable on next boot or next reboot.<\/p>\n<p>136<br \/>00:16:08.120 &#8211;&gt; 00:16:23.000<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and that&#8217;s how bad or on shut down. So we forgot to mention. And that&#8217;s how most of our customers are deploying or sending out the comment to download the the from the update. Now, is that an updated? That&#8217;s an updated firmware. I&#8217;m talking about like a blank machine that has nothing. sorry<\/p>\n<p>137<br \/>00:16:23.540 &#8211;&gt; 00:16:25.950<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: they are mostly, I mean.<\/p>\n<p>138<br \/>00:16:26.280 &#8211;&gt; 00:16:37.509<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I would say, 90 persons are using any kind of network deployment like Pixe or using the Sccm deployment toolkit that we have.<\/p>\n<p>139<br \/>00:16:37.550 &#8211;&gt; 00:16:54.480<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and the rest is honestly doing it by hand by using a USB stick, which is called the OS Creator stick, and just booting the device from it inside the firmware. Remove the USB stick, and that&#8217;s it. So on the company network we&#8217;re talking. Maybe. Pixie, if you&#8217;re doing it manually, you&#8217;re talking to USB or<\/p>\n<p>140<br \/>00:16:54.490 &#8211;&gt; 00:17:07.470<br \/>Andy Whiteside: ideal world these days, which is becoming more and more common. You you ordered it from Lenovo, or Lg. Or somebody, and it came with some version, maybe out of date, or maybe not. and it was ready to start talking and get the updates.<\/p>\n<p>141<br \/>00:17:08.140 &#8211;&gt; 00:17:16.640<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: or you using the Ud pocket which makes you even more flexible in terms of endpoint, because you&#8217;d boot the USB. Stick from any kind of endpoint, and your installation<\/p>\n<p>142<br \/>00:17:16.680 &#8211;&gt; 00:17:30.780<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: of igos and your environment for your citrix, or whatever environment is always suddenly USB stick. That might be the alternative. But for the pure installation I would say yes, 80 to 80% to 90% using network network deployments and for the rest, really by hand.<\/p>\n<p>143<br \/>00:17:30.800 &#8211;&gt; 00:17:32.000<br \/>d'accord.<\/p>\n<p>144<br \/>00:17:32.210 &#8211;&gt; 00:17:43.869<br \/>Andy Whiteside: okay, that kind of sets the table for me on that. And then. Now let&#8217;s go into what you were talking about just now around the I guess we need to cover 2 things we need to cover what Edwin has here in terms of how to set up the cloud storage target.<\/p>\n<p>145<br \/>00:17:43.880 &#8211;&gt; 00:17:56.439<br \/>Andy Whiteside: as well as you know the concept, and maybe we&#8217;ll round this out now with the idea. You have the firmware installed. Now you&#8217;re either looking to get firmware updates, or those custom partitions for those apps that are not baked into the I, Joel Firmware.<\/p>\n<p>146<br \/>00:17:57.150 &#8211;&gt; 00:17:58.120<br \/>Exactly<\/p>\n<p>147<br \/>00:17:59.530 &#8211;&gt; 00:18:10.629<br \/>Andy Whiteside: so. Where do you want to go from here? Do you want to continue down the path of You know the the the reasons and and the starting points? Or do we want to jump into what everyone has here in terms of what needs to be configured in the cloud to make it work.<\/p>\n<p>148<br \/>00:18:11.060 &#8211;&gt; 00:18:26.009<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I would just maybe start with a little bit of explanation, a little bit of background information about why and how we are pushing that to the end point, because we had an interesting discussion in the adjacent community a couple of days ago. To be more precise, it was yesterday<\/p>\n<p>149<br \/>00:18:26.270 &#8211;&gt; 00:18:30.819<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: where a customer was asking, hey, it&#8217;s great to push<\/p>\n<p>150<br \/>00:18:30.840 &#8211;&gt; 00:18:37.869<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: a firmware update to all my endpoints, especially the people who are working for more and etc., but wouldn&#8217;t be<\/p>\n<p>151<br \/>00:18:38.140 &#8211;&gt; 00:18:45.849<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: it easier to have the end user choosing the moment where he could deploy and install the firmware update.<\/p>\n<p>152<br \/>00:18:46.250 &#8211;&gt; 00:18:58.399<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: or in a perfect world, having maybe a script having a tool which is checking. Is there a new or a firmware update available? And if yes, give the you the ability to choose the easy moment.<\/p>\n<p>153<br \/>00:18:58.600 &#8211;&gt; 00:19:05.940<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: The short answer for both arguments are: No, we don&#8217;t have that at the moment. It&#8217;s still under development.<\/p>\n<p>154<br \/>00:19:06.000 &#8211;&gt; 00:19:24.539<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: If you are part of advanced services at Agile. You might ask your Trm. Or a direct contact to get an access to to the shell script, but for the moment we have to script it. And I just said the discussion, like I said a couple of days ago, and we went to that process, and it&#8217;s working pretty good.<\/p>\n<p>155<br \/>00:19:24.550 &#8211;&gt; 00:19:26.380<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: And<\/p>\n<p>156<br \/>00:19:26.430 &#8211;&gt; 00:19:43.559<br \/>Andy Whiteside: but that&#8217;s really the the general. But from the endpoint perspective. So what you&#8217;re saying now is the the admin determines. When it happens, you&#8217;re saying that there&#8217;s a possibility, or there to the script, or in the future, where the end user can say, yeah, I know it&#8217;s. I&#8217;ve got to do an upgrade. But i&#8217;ll I&#8217;ll say yes when it&#8217;s I&#8217;m ready for that to happen.<\/p>\n<p>157<br \/>00:19:44.840 &#8211;&gt; 00:19:45.540<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Yeah.<\/p>\n<p>158<br \/>00:19:45.650 &#8211;&gt; 00:19:47.490<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I would say, yeah.<\/p>\n<p>159<br \/>00:19:47.570 &#8211;&gt; 00:19:53.840<br \/>Andy Whiteside: definitely. Let me pause this here real quick Mo, and we&#8217;ve covered a lot, any anything you want to ask or add to the topic before<\/p>\n<p>160<br \/>00:19:53.860 &#8211;&gt; 00:19:55.250<br \/>Andy Whiteside: sub continues on.<\/p>\n<p>161<br \/>00:19:58.720 &#8211;&gt; 00:20:09.020<br \/>moin: no, I think. For now the really interesting topics especially about secure versus a regular Ftp. And<\/p>\n<p>162<br \/>00:20:10.040 &#8211;&gt; 00:20:23.040<br \/>moin: secure is something that is always especially in the in the world of Linux when when we talk about moving files up and down secure pieces, is the only thing that we recommend from<\/p>\n<p>163<br \/>00:20:23.250 &#8211;&gt; 00:20:25.909<br \/>moin: coming from the consulting background, and<\/p>\n<p>164<br \/>00:20:25.990 &#8211;&gt; 00:20:29.289<br \/>moin: having done these things over a number of<\/p>\n<p>165<br \/>00:20:29.460 &#8211;&gt; 00:20:32.430<br \/>moin: a number of times, I feel<\/p>\n<p>166<br \/>00:20:32.460 &#8211;&gt; 00:20:37.319<br \/>moin: the the the key for all these things, and especially when when you are moving.<\/p>\n<p>167<br \/>00:20:37.520 &#8211;&gt; 00:20:45.820<br \/>moin: having that security in place, and using that protocol sftp protocol to move files up and down.<\/p>\n<p>168<br \/>00:20:46.020 &#8211;&gt; 00:20:51.300<br \/>moin: I have seen many time, especially when when it comes to<\/p>\n<p>169<br \/>00:20:51.350 &#8211;&gt; 00:20:55.530<br \/>moin: side loading or installing application in custom. Partition<\/p>\n<p>170<br \/>00:20:55.750 &#8211;&gt; 00:21:03.060<br \/>moin: people tend to try to find shortcuts, and I feel that having this topic<\/p>\n<p>171<br \/>00:21:03.080 &#8211;&gt; 00:21:04.659<br \/>moin: that we are talking about<\/p>\n<p>172<br \/>00:21:04.960 &#8211;&gt; 00:21:22.360<br \/>moin: having this topic that we are talking about is is very key for our listeners to understand the importance. So I think I think. i&#8217;m interested. And even having done these things many times, i&#8217;m really intrigued to listen to what serve is<\/p>\n<p>173<br \/>00:21:22.370 &#8211;&gt; 00:21:32.110<br \/>Andy Whiteside: talking about following the practices doing these kinds of partnerships. There&#8217;s there&#8217;s doing it, and there&#8217;s doing it right. And I think what everyone here that steps. Highlighting is Here&#8217;s how to do it. Right?<\/p>\n<p>174<br \/>00:21:32.420 &#8211;&gt; 00:21:33.300<br \/>moin: That&#8217;s right.<\/p>\n<p>175<br \/>00:21:33.920 &#8211;&gt; 00:21:35.370<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Okay. So<\/p>\n<p>176<br \/>00:21:35.490 &#8211;&gt; 00:21:41.290<br \/>Andy Whiteside: walk us through what everyone&#8217;s covering here and and which parts go in which order and and why they matter<\/p>\n<p>177<br \/>00:21:42.140 &#8211;&gt; 00:21:51.640<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: so the best practice. And that&#8217;s the reason why we are showing that that blog article is obviously you could easily on the icg server, which is usually<\/p>\n<p>178<br \/>00:21:51.860 &#8211;&gt; 00:21:56.129<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: on your cloud service in your Dmz or wherever you want to install it.<\/p>\n<p>179<br \/>00:21:56.180 &#8211;&gt; 00:21:58.780<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: a Linux box where you install our service<\/p>\n<p>180<br \/>00:21:59.980 &#8211;&gt; 00:22:12.730<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: in a theoretical way. You could use the same box install there an Ftp. On the Http server and get the downloads from there. We are not recommending that even if it would be sufficient.<\/p>\n<p>181<br \/>00:22:12.850 &#8211;&gt; 00:22:17.060<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: But from a security perspective it&#8217;s always good to separate the management<\/p>\n<p>182<br \/>00:22:17.280 &#8211;&gt; 00:22:18.100<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: channel<\/p>\n<p>183<br \/>00:22:18.150 &#8211;&gt; 00:22:27.659<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: from some download and let&#8217;s say public servers, and that&#8217;s where we are usually recommending you, not using the same. So, even if, like, I said it would work.<\/p>\n<p>184<br \/>00:22:27.950 &#8211;&gt; 00:22:36.940<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So that&#8217;s what we discussed. Then with Evan and Evan went through. Then the process of hey? Why not using a new feature which is available in azure?<\/p>\n<p>185<br \/>00:22:37.260 &#8211;&gt; 00:22:44.969<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: And this feature? And I have to mention that honestly, I didn&#8217;t have time to double check if it&#8217;s available now everywhere, because it was a technique of preview<\/p>\n<p>186<br \/>00:22:45.010 &#8211;&gt; 00:22:49.159<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: available in some regions of the azure world.<\/p>\n<p>187<br \/>00:22:49.370 &#8211;&gt; 00:22:50.260<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: But<\/p>\n<p>188<br \/>00:22:50.610 &#8211;&gt; 00:23:06.849<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: it should be at this from a discussion I had yesterday. It should be a way in North America, too, so you can just go to your to your previous features. If you go to your azure management, console, and there you have a specific feature, a specific menu which is called private features.<\/p>\n<p>189<br \/>00:23:06.930 &#8211;&gt; 00:23:16.240<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Under that you can register for a new feature set, which were then released after a couple of weeks or months, to your standard repository of of azure.<\/p>\n<p>190<br \/>00:23:16.500 &#8211;&gt; 00:23:21.930<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: That&#8217;s which is called sftp support for our azure blob storage.<\/p>\n<p>191<br \/>00:23:22.930 &#8211;&gt; 00:23:24.280<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: As soon as<\/p>\n<p>192<br \/>00:23:24.560 &#8211;&gt; 00:23:33.119<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: you added that to your to your port for you, you can then say, under your storage accounts. I want to create a new one. Obviously you have<\/p>\n<p>193<br \/>00:23:33.700 &#8211;&gt; 00:23:38.230<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: existing ones. You can. You can create a new resource, and from there<\/p>\n<p>194<br \/>00:23:38.390 &#8211;&gt; 00:23:44.530<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: you just need a name basically and add it to an existing or to a new storage group<\/p>\n<p>195<br \/>00:23:44.760 &#8211;&gt; 00:23:52.990<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: as soon as you had that. Because, yeah, depending on where and out you are, and what your users are.<\/p>\n<p>196<br \/>00:23:53.300 &#8211;&gt; 00:24:05.349<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: It&#8217;s good to check if the region is matching your expectations. So if you want to do it for for Europe for North America. Please choose to different regions. Just make sure that you are not going over a high latency.<\/p>\n<p>197<br \/>00:24:05.420 &#8211;&gt; 00:24:08.389<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and if you are not seeing it in North America, please to the region<\/p>\n<p>198<br \/>00:24:08.710 &#8211;&gt; 00:24:14.299<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Europe, North Europe, or wherever you are. Just to be sure that you have the feature listed.<\/p>\n<p>199<br \/>00:24:14.770 &#8211;&gt; 00:24:24.000<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Honestly, I tested it. I don&#8217;t know it was 2 months ago. The performance with standard is more than enough. You don&#8217;t have to go for premium.<\/p>\n<p>200<br \/>00:24:24.200 &#8211;&gt; 00:24:32.910<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: even if you want to be bulletproof, and if you want to deploy it to 10,000 devices, which I don&#8217;t expect you to do. But who knows?<\/p>\n<p>201<br \/>00:24:32.990 &#8211;&gt; 00:24:34.310<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Make<\/p>\n<p>202<br \/>00:24:34.340 &#8211;&gt; 00:24:47.220<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: be a good way to do, because it also gives you the ability to have a specific reporting inside of azure, showing a little bit more detailed information about how the transfer rate. The latency was, and so on. But, like I said, the standard is great.<\/p>\n<p>203<br \/>00:24:47.250 &#8211;&gt; 00:24:48.490<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and from there on<\/p>\n<p>204<br \/>00:24:49.050 &#8211;&gt; 00:24:56.739<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: you have to enable 2 different check boxes in the Data Lake and the advanced tab of your of your storage account.<\/p>\n<p>205<br \/>00:24:56.980 &#8211;&gt; 00:25:07.719<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: It&#8217;s called. Enable here, i&#8217;m not sure if I can pronounce it right in English. But here I can say it in French Hiroshi namespace, and then check box.<\/p>\n<p>206<br \/>00:25:07.890 &#8211;&gt; 00:25:11.590<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: then enabled obviously the Sftp protocol itself.<\/p>\n<p>207<br \/>00:25:11.860 &#8211;&gt; 00:25:24.860<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: It&#8217;s hierarchical. Thank you very much. It sounds of way better on your side, and then you have to enable the feature itself, which is called sftp. So secure. File, transfer protocol<\/p>\n<p>208<br \/>00:25:25.460 &#8211;&gt; 00:25:26.690<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: from there on.<\/p>\n<p>209<br \/>00:25:27.100 &#8211;&gt; 00:25:36.299<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I would definitely recommend to add a few users to that to the storage, I mean, just because you want to separate, maybe your test account<\/p>\n<p>210<br \/>00:25:36.390 &#8211;&gt; 00:25:41.999<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: from your deployment account, and that&#8217;s what you are doing. If you go to your data storage<\/p>\n<p>211<br \/>00:25:42.440 &#8211;&gt; 00:25:46.650<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: again in your azure management tool, then go to containers.<\/p>\n<p>212<br \/>00:25:46.790 &#8211;&gt; 00:25:57.260<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and inside of your container you will see your freshly created service, and from there on you can just click on it and add a local, user the local. User<\/p>\n<p>213<br \/>00:25:57.350 &#8211;&gt; 00:26:00.280<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: honestly, the name is up to you.<\/p>\n<p>214<br \/>00:26:00.860 &#8211;&gt; 00:26:09.579<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: In my opinion this part was a plane, and without any kind of special characters in the name<\/p>\n<p>215<br \/>00:26:10.080 &#8211;&gt; 00:26:11.150<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: it will work.<\/p>\n<p>216<br \/>00:26:11.380 &#8211;&gt; 00:26:20.820<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: But before having something complicated which might be hard to reverse. Engineer at the end, please start with just a standard name like sftp test, use, or whatever.<\/p>\n<p>217<br \/>00:26:20.890 &#8211;&gt; 00:26:25.750<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: without with a plus our exclamation mark, and from there<\/p>\n<p>218<br \/>00:26:25.820 &#8211;&gt; 00:26:34.640<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I would recommend to set an Ssh password. Why are we using Ssh. Password and combined with secure Ftp.<\/p>\n<p>219<br \/>00:26:35.820 &#8211;&gt; 00:26:51.000<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I don&#8217;t want to hijack the card to extend the difference between Sftp and Ftps, but there is a huge difference between both, so I would just make the story short. Sftp is usually going through the standard part, which is 22<\/p>\n<p>220<br \/>00:26:51.010 &#8211;&gt; 00:26:58.980<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and sftp and ftp and Ftp. Are working through the dynamic power range over the 21 and upside.<\/p>\n<p>221<br \/>00:26:59.200 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:03.259<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Use a h password. Define your<\/p>\n<p>222<br \/>00:27:03.280 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:04.310<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: username.<\/p>\n<p>223<br \/>00:27:04.350 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:05.300<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: then<\/p>\n<p>224<br \/>00:27:05.500 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:06.830<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: check your permissions.<\/p>\n<p>225<br \/>00:27:07.000 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:13.709<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: In my opinion I would add something to the to the blog post from from Edwin I would separate the the<\/p>\n<p>226<br \/>00:27:13.860 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:19.120<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: upload or the management test user from the download once he made both.<\/p>\n<p>227<br \/>00:27:19.470 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:30.929<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and this is on the STEM side. So you just need to read and list from the rights, because obviously you don&#8217;t want someone who is downloading to upload something at the same time to your server.<\/p>\n<p>228<br \/>00:27:31.050 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:31.850<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So<\/p>\n<p>229<br \/>00:27:32.480 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:41.509<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: just check your permissions to be a read and list. The read has to be said that obviously data that has been asked can be a read.<\/p>\n<p>230<br \/>00:27:41.650 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:45.970<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: but at the same time you have also on Sftp and Ftp side<\/p>\n<p>231<br \/>00:27:46.110 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:51.959<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: the list feature, which is mandatory to get a list of the Directory from a client perspective.<\/p>\n<p>232<br \/>00:27:53.180 &#8211;&gt; 00:27:57.150<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and then last one the Home Directory, which is the name of your storage.<\/p>\n<p>233<br \/>00:27:57.250 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:00.040<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and from there on, just secure with the password.<\/p>\n<p>234<br \/>00:28:00.620 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:02.550<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and then test was<\/p>\n<p>235<br \/>00:28:02.920 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:03.690<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Europe<\/p>\n<p>236<br \/>00:28:03.770 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:11.330<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: favourite Ftp. Client could be win. Scp can be Ssdp client from the command line.<\/p>\n<p>237<br \/>00:28:11.460 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:16.049<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: whatever you prefer, but I would definitely recommend to test it before creating your profile.<\/p>\n<p>238<br \/>00:28:16.600 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:19.449<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: And the major point that I would like to mention there is.<\/p>\n<p>239<br \/>00:28:19.560 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:24.819<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and not only try to connect, not only do a proport or tennet really open<\/p>\n<p>240<br \/>00:28:25.090 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:26.990<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: an Ftp client<\/p>\n<p>241<br \/>00:28:27.100 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:28.879<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: which is sftp capable.<\/p>\n<p>242<br \/>00:28:29.300 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:32.190<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and try to download something, because<\/p>\n<p>243<br \/>00:28:32.220 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:40.150<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: as soon as you connect you will get a listing, and from there the reading permission will hit in, and then you can try to download something, and that one is failing.<\/p>\n<p>244<br \/>00:28:41.010 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:44.670<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Usually it&#8217;s related to rights or permissions.<\/p>\n<p>245<br \/>00:28:47.010 &#8211;&gt; 00:28:59.179<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Yeah, that&#8217;s always good advice, and it&#8217;s, you know. I don&#8217;t know about you said. But when you&#8217;re doing something like this around Ftp or the secure telnet or things like that when you when you can do it yourself manually before you automate it.<\/p>\n<p>246<br \/>00:28:59.360 &#8211;&gt; 00:29:09.810<br \/>Andy Whiteside: it, it&#8217;s for the admin it&#8217;s like this. it&#8217;s like this Nirvana feeling of Yes, I know at least this much of it works. So what I do next is either it&#8217;s going to be the problem, or it&#8217;s going to work<\/p>\n<p>247<br \/>00:29:12.120 &#8211;&gt; 00:29:20.769<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: 2 to 100. So so many things in our lives these days, especially on our consumer side. You&#8217;re relying on like 15 systems to all work appropriately for that magical<\/p>\n<p>248<br \/>00:29:21.290 &#8211;&gt; 00:29:27.640<br \/>Andy Whiteside: thing to happen. It&#8217;s so nice to be able to break it down component by component, and see each step of the process Where?<\/p>\n<p>249<br \/>00:29:29.450 &#8211;&gt; 00:29:30.110<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Yeah.<\/p>\n<p>250<br \/>00:29:30.990 &#8211;&gt; 00:29:41.039<br \/>And I know that I&#8217;m. Usually that person who is trying to make it right from the beginning on. So making extremely complicated passwords complicated usernames.<\/p>\n<p>251<br \/>00:29:41.240 &#8211;&gt; 00:29:51.069<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and then at the end, it&#8217;s not working. So i&#8217;m trying to reverse engineer. So i&#8217;m always saying, if you just want to test test with standard users, with a short and easy password<\/p>\n<p>252<br \/>00:29:51.110 &#8211;&gt; 00:30:00.019<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: also on the password side. Obviously, we want to have you uppercase, lowercase, number, or special characters. No question as long as possible.<\/p>\n<p>253<br \/>00:30:00.590 &#8211;&gt; 00:30:09.259<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: But please try something easy, and if that one is working you can then go the next step and make it even more secure, and change the password to something more complicated and complex.<\/p>\n<p>254<br \/>00:30:09.650 &#8211;&gt; 00:30:13.399<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: But I had some I mean it&#8217;s fixed since a long, long time.<\/p>\n<p>255<br \/>00:30:13.590 &#8211;&gt; 00:30:15.789<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: but from the actual history I had is<\/p>\n<p>256<br \/>00:30:16.230 &#8211;&gt; 00:30:26.510<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Sometimes there is just a weird back somewhere in the curl or the Donald process, and a special character, or one special character is maybe misinterpreted on our side.<\/p>\n<p>257<br \/>00:30:26.650 &#8211;&gt; 00:30:30.789<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: not only on ours, but in general in the Ftp client world.<\/p>\n<p>258<br \/>00:30:30.890 &#8211;&gt; 00:30:38.810<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So do me a favor. Start with something like I. 1, 2, 3, exclamation mark, and if that one is working, make it extremely<\/p>\n<p>259<br \/>00:30:39.260 &#8211;&gt; 00:30:52.429<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: secure by putting an I uppercase, azure one to 3. Yeah, that&#8217;s the that&#8217;s the Keep it simple, stupid model at least start there. But but don&#8217;t forget to go back and secure it.<\/p>\n<p>260<br \/>00:30:53.420 &#8211;&gt; 00:30:57.250<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Okay. So yeah, as soon as you did that<\/p>\n<p>261<br \/>00:30:57.280 &#8211;&gt; 00:30:59.820<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: as you test it was your was your Ftp client.<\/p>\n<p>262<br \/>00:30:59.870 &#8211;&gt; 00:31:03.000<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: We are now going back to the age world.<\/p>\n<p>263<br \/>00:31:03.700 &#8211;&gt; 00:31:12.789<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Don&#8217;t expect your to be configured to get directly download by auto, discovering something like that note.<\/p>\n<p>264<br \/>00:31:13.370 &#8211;&gt; 00:31:32.130<br \/>Andy Whiteside: You have to create a profile. So can I see a question on this first. A lot of times when I do ums related things, i&#8217;ll do it on the local OS first to make sure it works, and then if that works, then I take that same concept and then put it to ums and push it out with a profile it does. Is that a reality? And what we&#8217;re talking about here.<\/p>\n<p>265<br \/>00:31:32.730 &#8211;&gt; 00:31:48.749<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: yes, it&#8217;s reality. I&#8217;m doing that sometimes exactly this way. So i&#8217;m agreeing at the same time. It can also cause a little bit of trouble, because if you are testing things locally, you are removing then a profile from your from your ums.<\/p>\n<p>266<br \/>00:31:48.760 &#8211;&gt; 00:32:01.879<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and the feature is still there locally, because you did it configured. Luckily you didn&#8217;t deleted it, and you just forget it there, so it can cause a little bit of false positive sometimes. So i&#8217;m really trying, and that&#8217;s my recommendation also to our listeners. If you can<\/p>\n<p>267<br \/>00:32:01.960 &#8211;&gt; 00:32:13.489<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: please try everything from the side If you want to do some scripting and command line stuff obviously do that from the endpoint. It does make sense to start with deploying that via the<\/p>\n<p>268<br \/>00:32:14.180 &#8211;&gt; 00:32:24.950<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: But for such kind of things i&#8217;m a little bit cautious, and I would say, profits will be my bed of it. Yeah, how about this? From a. From a guy who gets to play idle admin everyone, so i&#8217;ll do things locally.<\/p>\n<p>269<br \/>00:32:25.000 &#8211;&gt; 00:32:30.689<br \/>Andy Whiteside: and then I will, you know, hit the escape key and reset the OS, and then do it from the ums.<\/p>\n<p>270<br \/>00:32:30.700 &#8211;&gt; 00:32:52.450<br \/>Andy Whiteside: You know it&#8217;s it&#8217;s it&#8217;s your preference of that preference. But that&#8217;s that&#8217;s how I like to do it. and I want to make sure our listeners know that you can. You can try things locally. That&#8217;s one of my favorite things about the Igl world is everything that you could do from us. Almost everything you could do locally first. But you&#8217;re you&#8217;re absolutely right. You don&#8217;t want to tattoo that stuff in there. So a true factory reset of that OS minus the license. The license stays.<\/p>\n<p>271<br \/>00:32:52.460 &#8211;&gt; 00:32:56.709<br \/>Andy Whiteside: and you you now have a blank slate to go. Take it to the next step<\/p>\n<p>272<br \/>00:32:57.940 &#8211;&gt; 00:33:10.660<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: you should work for I jo it&#8217;s perfect. Yeah, it&#8217;s it&#8217;s it&#8217;s kind of known that I would work right. I always wanted to be that Linux admin You guys would be my perfect answer for how to be that in user compute, Linux Guy, that I always wanted to be<\/p>\n<p>273<br \/>00:33:11.590 &#8211;&gt; 00:33:13.980<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: perfect. I&#8217;m happy to welcome you.<\/p>\n<p>274<br \/>00:33:14.660 &#8211;&gt; 00:33:19.179<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Now, that&#8217;s really cool. I mean, that&#8217;s definitely the approach I would like to follow. If you do something locally.<\/p>\n<p>275<br \/>00:33:19.260 &#8211;&gt; 00:33:27.859<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and you transferred everything to the and you want to be sure it working again after that reset a factory default is mandatory. So yeah, thanks for putting that out.<\/p>\n<p>276<br \/>00:33:28.620 &#8211;&gt; 00:33:46.640<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So on the firmware update side on the universal measurement. Suites are also known as we are working with profiles. Profiles are configuration theats that we are deploying to our endpoints. That&#8217;s something which is not extremely secret. You should work with that since a couple of years.<\/p>\n<p>277<br \/>00:33:47.110 &#8211;&gt; 00:33:50.989<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: But for the timber updates we have to be crystal clear<\/p>\n<p>278<br \/>00:33:51.440 &#8211;&gt; 00:33:52.280<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: there was.<\/p>\n<p>279<br \/>00:33:52.620 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:02.679<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: There are, I don&#8217;t know 10 to 15 different ways to deploy from the update to the endpoint depending from the procedure you are using. We are really focusing on<\/p>\n<p>280<br \/>00:34:03.160 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:07.839<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: the standard way we are not speaking about body update or something like that, really just<\/p>\n<p>281<br \/>00:34:07.960 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:12.589<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: having a profile created and download from the external server. So what you need is<\/p>\n<p>282<br \/>00:34:12.610 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:25.579<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: you create a new profile. You go to a system, then update firm by update, and from there you have to choose your protocol, which is by default by Http, as if I remember right.<\/p>\n<p>283<br \/>00:34:25.940 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:27.900<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Just move it to secure Ftp.<\/p>\n<p>284<br \/>00:34:28.110 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:33.379<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Then add your server name that you just took over from your blob on your azure.<\/p>\n<p>285<br \/>00:34:34.239 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:36.729<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Take the path that you I mean<\/p>\n<p>286<br \/>00:34:37.110 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:38.910<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: that should go or step backward.<\/p>\n<p>287<br \/>00:34:38.960 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:40.460<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: We didn&#8217;t spoke about that<\/p>\n<p>288<br \/>00:34:40.550 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:48.319<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: your firmware, the firmware file that you are downloading from idle com slash software downloads is a zip file.<\/p>\n<p>289<br \/>00:34:48.800 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:50.170<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: The zip file<\/p>\n<p>290<br \/>00:34:50.340 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:52.779<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: cannot be deployed directly to your endpoint.<\/p>\n<p>291<br \/>00:34:53.739 &#8211;&gt; 00:34:56.290<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: It has to be extracted before<\/p>\n<p>292<br \/>00:34:56.340 &#8211;&gt; 00:35:05.869<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: made available somewhere, and I didn&#8217;t mention it. Sorry for that. You have to deploy the extracted zip file to your<\/p>\n<p>293<br \/>00:35:05.900 &#8211;&gt; 00:35:22.809<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: sftp server you just created before. So you have a path which is, I don&#8217;t know, download or slash firmware, and then my recommendation is to create a sub folder for the for the version like 11 or 8 to 230,<\/p>\n<p>294<br \/>00:35:23.220 &#8211;&gt; 00:35:32.400<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and extract the zip file to that folder. That&#8217;s really mandatory. Just uploading the Zip file will not work. It would not break something, but it would just not work.<\/p>\n<p>295<br \/>00:35:32.420 &#8211;&gt; 00:35:35.959<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So you have to extract the zip file to your blob.<\/p>\n<p>296<br \/>00:35:36.070 &#8211;&gt; 00:35:41.599<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and from there, coming back to the profile. You have a thorough path, and on the server path you just enter<\/p>\n<p>297<br \/>00:35:42.080 &#8211;&gt; 00:35:46.459<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: the freshly, create a path like download or folder what you prefer.<\/p>\n<p>298<br \/>00:35:46.520 &#8211;&gt; 00:35:51.179<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Then slash your downer path to 11 by 2 and 30.<\/p>\n<p>299<br \/>00:35:51.230 &#8211;&gt; 00:35:53.399<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Flash username password.<\/p>\n<p>300<br \/>00:35:53.980 &#8211;&gt; 00:35:54.859<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and<\/p>\n<p>301<br \/>00:35:55.170 &#8211;&gt; 00:36:01.040<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: that&#8217;s usually it. You click. Ok, You send the profile to the endpoint, and you can send an update by hand.<\/p>\n<p>302<br \/>00:36:02.240 &#8211;&gt; 00:36:12.939<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: What you also have is the ability to say, hey, Why not? Using a kind of automatism that the endpoint will check by shut down. If there is a new firmware.<\/p>\n<p>303<br \/>00:36:13.510 &#8211;&gt; 00:36:33.230<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: my recommendation is not to use check on boot just because it can annoy the the user which is working on the endpoint. Why, he has to wait for an update. I mean, we&#8217;re all working with windows devices for a long time. We know what it means to have a device which is going through the update process by booting up. It&#8217;s annoying.<\/p>\n<p>304<br \/>00:36:33.370 &#8211;&gt; 00:36:34.149<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So<\/p>\n<p>305<br \/>00:36:34.180 &#8211;&gt; 00:36:42.830<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: if you want to take an automatic system, just check the checkbox in your profile automatic update check on, shut down, and then the device should update automatically on.<\/p>\n<p>306<br \/>00:36:42.990 &#8211;&gt; 00:36:43.840<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: shut down<\/p>\n<p>307<br \/>00:36:45.520 &#8211;&gt; 00:36:47.610<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: that the firmware update part<\/p>\n<p>308<br \/>00:36:48.240 &#8211;&gt; 00:36:58.279<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I mean. I mentioned it before. You can also work with tasks, with the jobs part of the agile of the agile but if you want to make it from the endpoint side you can use their job.<\/p>\n<p>309<br \/>00:36:58.640 &#8211;&gt; 00:37:00.519<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and then we have the custom partitions.<\/p>\n<p>310<br \/>00:37:00.640 &#8211;&gt; 00:37:04.129<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: because some partitions are my definition of them. Are<\/p>\n<p>311<br \/>00:37:04.400 &#8211;&gt; 00:37:19.659<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: we are packing together all dependencies for a binary. So let&#8217;s imagine we are thinking about Chrome, Google Chrome. We have a binary. So an executable file is relying on libraries, on folders, on configuration files, and so on.<\/p>\n<p>312<br \/>00:37:20.170 &#8211;&gt; 00:37:24.420<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: And the magic that Romney is doing with the Github side is.<\/p>\n<p>313<br \/>00:37:25.430 &#8211;&gt; 00:37:29.480<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: he is basically creating a portable version of on Linux application.<\/p>\n<p>314<br \/>00:37:29.510 &#8211;&gt; 00:37:41.669<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and this Linux application can then be deployed by our custom partition rollout to the endpoint, and that&#8217;s what we are covering in a new profile in system, firmware, customization, custom, partition.<\/p>\n<p>315<br \/>00:37:41.780 &#8211;&gt; 00:37:51.830<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and there is a point which is called download, and there big surprise on the URL. You have to enter the path. So sftp double dot<\/p>\n<p>316<br \/>00:37:51.910 &#8211;&gt; 00:37:53.350<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: your blob.<\/p>\n<p>317<br \/>00:37:53.470 &#8211;&gt; 00:37:54.729<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Then the path.<\/p>\n<p>318<br \/>00:37:55.020 &#8211;&gt; 00:38:05.439<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: then custom, partition, and whatever you would like to download, put your Username password in it, and you mentioned it in the initialization and financing scripts.<\/p>\n<p>319<br \/>00:38:06.600 &#8211;&gt; 00:38:09.100<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: And that&#8217;s it, basically you as the profile.<\/p>\n<p>320<br \/>00:38:09.290 &#8211;&gt; 00:38:19.289<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: the device should. And that&#8217;s the difference on custom partitions. Start the download immediately. So just be caution with that if you applied it directly, so click on now<\/p>\n<p>321<br \/>00:38:19.530 &#8211;&gt; 00:38:21.720<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and then the download will be reprocessed.<\/p>\n<p>322<br \/>00:38:22.660 &#8211;&gt; 00:38:29.119<br \/>Andy Whiteside: So set going back to the conversation earlier. So this is the process where the administrator has<\/p>\n<p>323<br \/>00:38:29.220 &#8211;&gt; 00:38:35.629<br \/>Andy Whiteside: the storage area that can be accessed from anywhere in the world, including the land, the way in or just the Internet.<\/p>\n<p>324<br \/>00:38:35.670 &#8211;&gt; 00:38:38.089<br \/>Andy Whiteside: but the administrator is<\/p>\n<p>325<br \/>00:38:38.570 &#8211;&gt; 00:38:44.890<br \/>Andy Whiteside: determining when this update gets pushed and the end user has no ability to override<\/p>\n<p>326<br \/>00:38:45.420 &#8211;&gt; 00:38:46.959<br \/>Andy Whiteside: that push an install.<\/p>\n<p>327<br \/>00:38:47.540 &#8211;&gt; 00:38:58.290<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: He could I mean speaking about the standout installation standard profiles. If you send out the comment to get a firmware update to an endpoint even over Sg.<\/p>\n<p>328<br \/>00:38:58.450 &#8211;&gt; 00:39:03.859<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: the device will start downloading after a time out, which is 20&nbsp;s by default.<\/p>\n<p>329<br \/>00:39:04.080 &#8211;&gt; 00:39:08.550<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and the user could theoretically say, okay, it will start immediately<\/p>\n<p>330<br \/>00:39:08.630 &#8211;&gt; 00:39:25.990<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: or click on a cancel, and that will not download any more. That&#8217;s definitely something which is extremely, extremely annoying, because then you have to re push it again. You have to create your report. That&#8217;s the reason why you can from one hand saying you will push it immediately.<\/p>\n<p>331<br \/>00:39:26.120 &#8211;&gt; 00:39:33.250<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: might be disturbing than the user so not recommended. You can push it without any kind of time out, and the option to interact<\/p>\n<p>332<br \/>00:39:33.270 &#8211;&gt; 00:39:39.050<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: like I said, not so good for find users, and the default is 20&nbsp;s, but it could be 20&nbsp;h<\/p>\n<p>333<br \/>00:39:39.480 &#8211;&gt; 00:39:50.330<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: no, 20&nbsp;h, not possible. There is a limit of 300&nbsp;s, if I remember right, double check. But it&#8217;s not. Yeah, okay. that might change on the West, by the way. No.<\/p>\n<p>334<br \/>00:39:50.420 &#8211;&gt; 00:39:56.220<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: to be more honest, it will change on us to have but for the moment on OS 11. It&#8217;s a standard time out.<\/p>\n<p>335<br \/>00:39:56.630 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:00.120<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and that&#8217;s the reason why we are going the other route<\/p>\n<p>336<br \/>00:40:00.380 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:04.810<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: by sending out a comment which is calling update on shutdown.<\/p>\n<p>337<br \/>00:40:05.260 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:10.210<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So when the user is, I mean you can combine it with a cool feature which is called procession. Command<\/p>\n<p>338<br \/>00:40:10.300 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:12.019<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: just briefly.<\/p>\n<p>339<br \/>00:40:12.110 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:14.110<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: as soon as you are<\/p>\n<p>340<br \/>00:40:14.150 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:20.329<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: coming at the end of your day. I don&#8217;t know which time you are closing your citric session, or whatever session.<\/p>\n<p>341<br \/>00:40:20.840 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:24.669<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and usually you have to click on, start, shut down, and the device will shut down.<\/p>\n<p>342<br \/>00:40:25.070 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:32.420<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: If you use post session command, you can say as soon as mycentric session ends, do something. In that case shut down a device.<\/p>\n<p>343<br \/>00:40:32.470 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:43.609<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and if you combine that with an automatic update check on, shut down. Then you are good to go, because you will not annoy the end, user because the update will be processed during the shutdown. So usually<\/p>\n<p>344<br \/>00:40:44.000 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:47.029<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: couple of minutes, or whatever, Donald Trump you have.<\/p>\n<p>345<br \/>00:40:47.100 &#8211;&gt; 00:40:56.890<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: but the user is already leaving the house. Leaving the endpoint. You can just leave it downloading and executing the update and start working on this on the next day. Was it any delay?<\/p>\n<p>346<br \/>00:40:58.430 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:02.779<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Okay, I mean that&#8217;s kind of the world we&#8217;ve got used to in in in the windows world, you<\/p>\n<p>347<br \/>00:41:02.830 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:07.629<br \/>Andy Whiteside: yeah, you expect, as I shut down to be prompted.<\/p>\n<p>348<br \/>00:41:07.790 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:12.659<br \/>Andy Whiteside: if it&#8217;s, you know, early earlier days, you know it earlier in the update process.<\/p>\n<p>349<br \/>00:41:12.720 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:18.250<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Hey, You got a shut down. You can either shut down or you can update it, shut down, or reboot, or update and reboot.<\/p>\n<p>350<br \/>00:41:18.300 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:24.220<br \/>Andy Whiteside: And then at some point, you know the the system team decides. Okay, You&#8217;re going to do this. You have no way out. You either.<\/p>\n<p>351<br \/>00:41:24.310 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:25.049<br \/>Andy Whiteside: You get it<\/p>\n<p>352<br \/>00:41:25.090 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:30.060<br \/>Andy Whiteside: period you&#8217;re going to get this update, whether you&#8217;re rebooting, shutting down, or i&#8217;m pushing it out right now.<\/p>\n<p>353<br \/>00:41:30.150 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:32.410<br \/>Andy Whiteside: but you give users that option to<\/p>\n<p>354<br \/>00:41:32.620 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:34.370<br \/>Andy Whiteside: you know, opt-in when they&#8217;re ready.<\/p>\n<p>355<br \/>00:41:35.230 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:38.000<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: But you are 100% right? It was asked.<\/p>\n<p>356<br \/>00:41:38.520 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:43.569<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Not only a couple a 1,000 times so you are asking, that is the right question, and yes.<\/p>\n<p>357<br \/>00:41:43.960 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:56.530<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I don&#8217;t expect it to get a change on OS 11. To be honest, but on OS 12 there will be a huge change in that update manner. So from background update over.<\/p>\n<p>358<br \/>00:41:57.120 &#8211;&gt; 00:41:58.159<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I forgot the name.<\/p>\n<p>359<br \/>00:41:58.410 &#8211;&gt; 00:42:09.459<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: bandwidth control, and so on, and so on. And even the time where you want to install the update will be controlled by the end. User a little bit more if you like it. You can also override it. But.<\/p>\n<p>360<br \/>00:42:09.570 &#8211;&gt; 00:42:24.069<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: that&#8217;s definitely something which is not extremely user friendly at the moment, and which we should definitely change. So Yes, definitely. Yes, yeah, I mean we we. There&#8217;s a lot to learn from Microsoft windows as to how to handle this kind of stuff and and and Microsoft windows, is<\/p>\n<p>361<br \/>00:42:24.240 &#8211;&gt; 00:42:30.590<br \/>Andy Whiteside: it&#8217;s it&#8217;s a very capable operating system that the problem is, it&#8217;s so capable and so friendly in terms of<\/p>\n<p>362<br \/>00:42:30.610 &#8211;&gt; 00:42:43.720<br \/>Andy Whiteside: being openness to do things that that&#8217;s where the the malicious part comes in. So a combination of a secure read-only managed Linux endpoint with a connectivity into a managed controlled<\/p>\n<p>363<br \/>00:42:43.730 &#8211;&gt; 00:42:52.599<br \/>Andy Whiteside: windows world for all those applications that you need for you know running enterprise and business applications. It&#8217;s the best of both worlds going back to our comments earlier that<\/p>\n<p>364<br \/>00:42:52.620 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:01.579<br \/>Andy Whiteside: if you know, if you&#8217;re running windows on the endpoint th that you should have a pretty good reason why you&#8217;re doing it. Because if you&#8217;re doing it, just because it&#8217;s your default, let&#8217;s talk and reconsider them.<\/p>\n<p>365<br \/>00:43:01.960 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:02.600<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: And<\/p>\n<p>366<br \/>00:43:02.970 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:04.399<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: yeah, absolutely<\/p>\n<p>367<br \/>00:43:05.150 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:08.430<br \/>Andy Whiteside: so, Seb: I think you&#8217;ve covered the topic here. What? What have you not covered?<\/p>\n<p>368<br \/>00:43:09.700 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:20.490<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I could tell you so much. I mean, are you interested in getting my my cooking skills or no, just getting well from there. I just now install the buddy updates. Tell us about buddy updates.<\/p>\n<p>369<br \/>00:43:21.150 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:23.469<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Yeah. So the body update. I mean.<\/p>\n<p>370<br \/>00:43:23.890 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:40.590<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: we covered the standard process of sending out an update to 10,000 devices. So let&#8217;s imagine now that you have a couple of branch offices, a branch office in Toronto Branch office in New York, and whoever so in every branch office you don&#8217;t have only one device from agile, but<\/p>\n<p>371<br \/>00:43:40.880 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:43.689<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: 1022, or whatever.<\/p>\n<p>372<br \/>00:43:43.850 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:47.569<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: So if you would in a standard way send out the<\/p>\n<p>373<br \/>00:43:47.780 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:49.850<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: firmware update to that devices<\/p>\n<p>374<br \/>00:43:50.420 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:55.489<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: depending on the size of your of your branch offers to 1020 device will<\/p>\n<p>375<br \/>00:43:55.530 &#8211;&gt; 00:43:58.220<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: download the firmware. Update<\/p>\n<p>376<br \/>00:43:58.250 &#8211;&gt; 00:44:02.529<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: 1020 times from the server, which is Ok. If you have enough resources.<\/p>\n<p>377<br \/>00:44:02.610 &#8211;&gt; 00:44:07.449<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: but from a sustainability perspective from data bandwidth.<\/p>\n<p>378<br \/>00:44:07.500 &#8211;&gt; 00:44:14.350<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: it doesn&#8217;t make a lot of sense. So what we are using I mean something that also Michael has not used for a couple of years, and still using it.<\/p>\n<p>379<br \/>00:44:14.460 &#8211;&gt; 00:44:20.170<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: We are updating one device in the branch office, and this device of a couple of them<\/p>\n<p>380<br \/>00:44:20.200 &#8211;&gt; 00:44:39.530<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: will then retain the firmware, update 5 for all the other devices in the location. So if you update one device from 10, the rest of the tenth or 9 should download the firmware, update not from the ums or from your azure blob any more, but from that one device which you get the update which makes it even<\/p>\n<p>381<br \/>00:44:39.540 &#8211;&gt; 00:44:44.160<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: easier to deploy for motors, because you don&#8217;t have to think about bandwidth consumption.<\/p>\n<p>382<br \/>00:44:44.190 &#8211;&gt; 00:44:49.269<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: What would happen if the the network part goes down, or what this kind of reason<\/p>\n<p>383<br \/>00:44:49.320 &#8211;&gt; 00:44:50.419<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: it&#8217;s really<\/p>\n<p>384<br \/>00:44:50.850 &#8211;&gt; 00:45:05.389<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: helping you as an administrator to keep your resources consumption low, and at the same time adding also a layer of security, because you don&#8217;t expose your device to don its F from somewhere, but really from the location itself. And<\/p>\n<p>385<br \/>00:45:05.530 &#8211;&gt; 00:45:10.350<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: the good thing is that the body update process, if it&#8217;s on the same network.<\/p>\n<p>386<br \/>00:45:10.550 &#8211;&gt; 00:45:13.279<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: villain, segment, or land segment.<\/p>\n<p>387<br \/>00:45:13.420 &#8211;&gt; 00:45:22.460<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: We also have an auto detection of Where is my next body, master, that the name that we have for the devices which got the update, and we&#8217;ll return it.<\/p>\n<p>388<br \/>00:45:22.680 &#8211;&gt; 00:45:30.069<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: and it would on it more or less, and apply it automatically if you wanted that the technique that we&#8217;re using by the update side.<\/p>\n<p>389<br \/>00:45:31.280 &#8211;&gt; 00:45:40.089<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Yeah, you guys, you guys have really thought of a lot in the ideal world in terms of getting these things up to date, and there&#8217;s custom, partition, custom partitions work with buddy updates as well or not.<\/p>\n<p>390<br \/>00:45:41.260 &#8211;&gt; 00:45:45.149<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: No, only from the<\/p>\n<p>391<br \/>00:45:46.280 &#8211;&gt; 00:45:58.599<br \/>Andy Whiteside: well, Seb: I I I needed this. I needed this topic covered. I needed to know there was a resource out there that would walk me through what needed to be done in azure to get this set up, and then what to do on the ideal side? This is a good topic, and i&#8217;m glad you brought it on<\/p>\n<p>392<br \/>00:45:59.670 &#8211;&gt; 00:46:08.629<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: cool. Thank you for having me here. It was always a pleasure to discuss that technical topic with you and a big shootout to Edwin, who wrote that block article.<\/p>\n<p>393<br \/>00:46:08.690 &#8211;&gt; 00:46:12.940<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: All the kudos goes to him. And yeah, thank you very much.<\/p>\n<p>394<br \/>00:46:12.980 &#8211;&gt; 00:46:17.670<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Well, I love that. We cover technical stuff, but they&#8217;re also very business applicable in today&#8217;s world.<\/p>\n<p>395<br \/>00:46:17.790 &#8211;&gt; 00:46:22.329<br \/>Andy Whiteside: These ideal devices are becoming more and more distributed off the land and land<\/p>\n<p>396<br \/>00:46:22.550 &#8211;&gt; 00:46:27.500<br \/>Andy Whiteside: and then the buddy update that applies for the land conversation will end the land conversation.<\/p>\n<p>397<br \/>00:46:28.500 &#8211;&gt; 00:46:31.200<br \/>Andy Whiteside: you know, Just just love the fact. We can have these chats<\/p>\n<p>398<br \/>00:46:31.440 &#8211;&gt; 00:46:37.620<br \/>Andy Whiteside: and cover topics that are very relevant to the ideal community, and really the thin client community in general.<\/p>\n<p>399<br \/>00:46:38.400 &#8211;&gt; 00:46:51.879<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: absolutely. And if you are not part of the agriculture community, please reach out to me. I&#8217;m happy to send you a join link, or just go to join Azure committee.com, and i&#8217;m happy to welcome you there. Because yeah, we are just a couple of<\/p>\n<p>400<br \/>00:46:52.020 &#8211;&gt; 00:46:55.299<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: a weird mastermind from the end user computing space, waiting for you.<\/p>\n<p>401<br \/>00:46:56.160 &#8211;&gt; 00:47:02.280<br \/>Andy Whiteside: Not not all that weird. It really is a good community of real people that are there to help each other. I I I love it. You guys have.<\/p>\n<p>402<br \/>00:47:02.620 &#8211;&gt; 00:47:07.359<br \/>Andy Whiteside: You guys have set the set the mark for others to follow, and I think some are trying.<\/p>\n<p>403<br \/>00:47:07.510 &#8211;&gt; 00:47:11.610<br \/>Andy Whiteside: and without community. You don&#8217;t really have a real business and love that you guys have done that.<\/p>\n<p>404<br \/>00:47:12.020 &#8211;&gt; 00:47:15.470<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Andy, By the way, will you be at the disruptive<\/p>\n<p>405<br \/>00:47:15.500 &#8211;&gt; 00:47:25.110<br \/>Andy Whiteside: in Nashville? Yes, I thought you&#8217;re going to ask me about meeting Moen, who&#8217;s no longer on the call here he had to drop for a customer call. Urgent call came in. he will be a munic, as of yesterday. He said he was<\/p>\n<p>406<br \/>00:47:25.530 &#8211;&gt; 00:47:32.530<br \/>Andy Whiteside: I wanted to go ask his wife before he committed, but he committed so Munich Moen Khan will be there, as well as the rest of our team out of India.<\/p>\n<p>407<br \/>00:47:33.940 &#8211;&gt; 00:47:47.519<br \/>Andy Whiteside: but I will be at Nashville, and so will moan I. I really want to go to Munich. I&#8217;ve got to be in India the following week. I&#8217;ve got my personal vacation the week before that life, life and works is so busy. But I will be in Nashville absolutely, and look forward to seeing people there.<\/p>\n<p>408<br \/>00:47:48.420 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:03.779<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: I hope to be there too, so it&#8217;s not official right now, but I hope to be there, and I would like to have a great discussion with you listeners, but also with you and the because we never met in person. So let&#8217;s hope that I just will make this happen. And we&#8217;re we&#8217;re hosting is in Tech is hosting a pick up<\/p>\n<p>409<br \/>00:48:03.840 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:05.309<br \/>Andy Whiteside: happy hour Tuesday night.<\/p>\n<p>410<br \/>00:48:05.330 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:13.729<br \/>Andy Whiteside: I believe it&#8217;s Tuesday night at the at the event. So I love to have everybody there, and you, of course. And then, whatever the community does during that i&#8217;ll, I&#8217;ll I&#8217;ll I&#8217;ll be there<\/p>\n<p>411<br \/>00:48:14.510 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:16.319<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: perfect. Do you really have them<\/p>\n<p>412<br \/>00:48:17.510 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:20.070<br \/>Andy Whiteside: All right, Set. Thank you as always, for your time<\/p>\n<p>413<br \/>00:48:20.120 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:29.829<br \/>Andy Whiteside: great discussion, and we will plan to talk to you again. I think we should be talking to you next week, or maybe the following week. But we will talk to you very shortly, and we&#8217;ll bring another topic, and<\/p>\n<p>414<br \/>00:48:29.890 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:31.590<br \/>Andy Whiteside: and we&#8217;ll go from there<\/p>\n<p>415<br \/>00:48:32.180 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:33.049<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: perfect.<\/p>\n<p>416<br \/>00:48:33.150 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:36.949<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: Then see you soon. I wish a great weekend. And yeah, see you next week.<\/p>\n<p>417<br \/>00:48:37.290 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:40.430<br \/>Andy Whiteside: I can&#8217;t believe you just said that I forgot it was Friday. But<\/p>\n<p>418<br \/>00:48:40.610 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:43.159<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: yeah, it&#8217;s all right.<\/p>\n<p>419<br \/>00:48:43.210 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:45.959<br \/>Andy Whiteside: It&#8217;ll be. It&#8217;ll be Monday again before we know it.<\/p>\n<p>420<br \/>00:48:46.700 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:47.580<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: That&#8217;s true.<\/p>\n<p>421<br \/>00:48:47.630 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:49.280<br \/>Andy Whiteside: All right, sir. Enjoy the rest of your day.<\/p>\n<p>422<br \/>00:48:49.680 &#8211;&gt; 00:48:51.169<br \/>Sebastien Perusat: You, too, Bye, bye.<\/p>\n<p><\/p>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Written by Edwin ten Haaf, IGEL Community Member More and more of our IGEL customers want to facilitate work from anywhere. 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