

Through an MDM integration, Jamf can let you use Google logins on macOS. Now, it’s even possible to deploy macOS and use G Suite to handle logins. Even “Login with Google” became a popular solution for many apps as well through the G Suites app market place. As SaaS web apps became the primary way to deploy new solutions, cloud-based directory solutions like JumpCloud and SSO solutions like Okta and Clever began to fill the gaps for simplified rollouts of these solutions. As mobile device management became a centralized way to manage macOS devices, AD binding became less critical.

Slowly over time, that started to matter less and less. On the Mac side during this time, the IT strategy was to bind Active Directory to macOS. It wasn’t that Apple offered its own authentication system, but instead, they didn’t have one. Therefore, these devices were single-user devices and didn’t need AD to log in to the devices. When the iPad was released, ActiveSync was on the iPhone and now had come to a tablet. Without ActiveSync, IT departments were forced to turn on IMAP access for people to get their Exchange email. The first chip in the armor of Active Directory was when the iPhone was released. Through his experience deploying and managing firewalls, switches, a mobile device management system, enterprise grade Wi-Fi, 100s of Macs, and 100s of iPads, Bradley will highlight ways in which Apple IT managers deploy Apple devices, build networks to support them, train users, stories from the trenches of IT management, and ways Apple could improve its products for IT departments.

Apple is, indirectly, the cause of active directory moving from a requirement to a choice.Ībout Apple Work: Bradley Chambers has been managing an enterprise IT network since 2009. For cloud-first companies, many of them aren’t even deploying an active directory infrastructure. It’s still a crucial part of IT strategy for many organizations, but it’s no longer the only strategy. We’ve all of a sudden realized in 2020 that AD is not everything. From Exchange to the shared drive, to a centralized login system, AD was everything. Microsoft’s Active Directory was the centerpiece of every enterprise’s IT strategy for many years.
