An easy way for authorized administrators to view the managed Apple admin account password via Terminal
Learn how to architect invitation-only betas for your elite testers for when your organization pilots new endpoint security solutions while maintaining your current offerings.
A function for your ~/.zshrc to self-heal the jamf binary via the Jamf Pro API
When Jamf Pro 10.32 introduced Recovery Lock Enablement in macOS Using the Jamf Pro API, I was excited to try the other side of the coin: Allowing end-users to view the recoveryOS password for their Mac with Apple silicon and then programmatically generating a new, random Recovery Lock password.
Functions for your ~/.zshrc to hopefully make your life as a Mac Admin easier
Description Make quick work of routine policy version updates with Jamf Pro Policy Editor Lite, which leverages the Jamf Pro API to automate routine policy…
Background In this session, you’ll learn how to leverage Jamf Pro’s extension attributes, Smart Groups and the API to allow your end users to easily…
Slimmed-down version of Jamf Pro Policy Editor Lite
Edit a policy’s version number via the Classic API About Since Jamf Pro PI-005903, I’ve been thinking of a faster way to update policies. Last week,…
Background While we graciously provide our JSS data to ServiceNow in the most automatted of fashions, it is a one-way relationship (i.e., the Facebook status between our…