

- #PICFRAME FOR MAC MEGAUPLOAD INSTALL#
- #PICFRAME FOR MAC MEGAUPLOAD PATCH#
- #PICFRAME FOR MAC MEGAUPLOAD FULL#
- #PICFRAME FOR MAC MEGAUPLOAD SOFTWARE#
Look at Crypt (I believe Graham Gilbert is the lead on this via github?), its a method to make sure you enforce encryption during setup and I believe Key Escrow. Don't quote me on this but SCCM might be able to do this if you enroll it via that method.ĪPFS + FileVault is fine, case sensitive is entirely your call though.

#PICFRAME FOR MAC MEGAUPLOAD SOFTWARE#
The good thing is you can group types of computers and software specifically for groups or machines. You will need to push your software packages out with a tool such as Munki. You can push packages via a USB device and kickstart devices into a Software deployment solution such as Munki. If a MDM + DEP solution is not available, check out Boostrappr. But, one tool that I recently found was google's restor tool.
#PICFRAME FOR MAC MEGAUPLOAD INSTALL#
You can still use Internet Recovery to Wipe and Install the OS. With Netboot that is dying with Mac Server App very very soon, the old ways of netrestore is basically gone. Some people have already given good suggestions so I'm going to just give a quick and rough breakdown:įigure out how you are going to create a fresh slate. If you are not going for a zero touch deployment and you need to configure machines that require hands on servicing before it goes out, you will need to figure out what exactly you need. So don't get discouraged with people telling you that. But in a nut shell, traditional imaging and deployment that Windows might still incorporate is frowned upon and already has been out the door for some time now.Īlso, while many people have slammed the fact that you are not mac experienced, you might have been the best person for the new change of adopting macOS into your ecosystem. Many people have already said this, but JAMF is the go to if your organization can afford it. I haven't tried it so can't speak for how well it works, but it might be worth a look.

But the guys who make MDS also have a solution for deploying Bootcamp if that's a necessity, it's called Winclone. I'd personally recommend going with a Parallels VM over Bootcamp, in which case you'd deploy the Parallels application itself and also a pre-built Windows VM in a shared location on the Mac's drive. The GUI in MDS doesn't offer all the options available in Imagr workflows. I believe this is an option when using Imagr (which is what MDS uses to actually deploy), but if so then you'll have to manually edit the workflow in the ist file to change the formatting of the drive when reinstalling macOS.
#PICFRAME FOR MAC MEGAUPLOAD FULL#
You can either install the applications within the MDS workflow, or preferably hand off to something more advanced like Munki or a full blown MDM after macOS has been deployed. This even works with newer T2-equipped Macs. Their instructional videos are very helpful and should get you up and running.
#PICFRAME FOR MAC MEGAUPLOAD PATCH#
Parallels is also ugly to manage (how are you going to do patch management on an OS that's suspended 99% of the time?), what's the requirement for the second OS? Would a remote desktop server fit this bill better?Īlso, going to say this early, the macadmins slack (link in the right) is a great place to go. Filevault for encryption is easy though, I run crypt for enrollment myself but most MDM's will make it easy.īootcamp is going to be a bad time to manage.

Why case sensitive? Don't do that on your boot drive. There are other solutions out there, it'll be worth finding out what's right for you. I prefer a mix of munki (open source software deployment tool) + micromdm (open source barebones mdm tool). It will make your life much easier going forward though. If they were already purchased it may be difficult depending on how they were procured. If you can, see if it's possible to get these machines into DEP, if you havent purchased yet this should be easy. Imaging is dead on the apple side, you're going to need an MDM solution.
