There is a minor difference in between Windows Server 2008 R1 and R2 when configuring Network Access Protection. The question asked in class is if while setting up a Security Health Valuator (SHV), is there a different tab from Windows 7. In the R1 version, there is a tab for settings pertaining to Windows XP and another for Windows Vista. In the R2 version (Pictured below) the interface is slightly different. Windows 7 and Windows Vista do share the same configuration settings.
As I'm writing this article, I'm also writing a customization for a PowerShell course I'm teaching next week in Phoenix. This customization deals with Group Policy and PowerShell. For those of you who attend my classes may already know this, but I sit their and try to ask the questions to myself that others may ask as I present the material. I finished up my customization a few hours ago and then I realized that I did not add in how to put a comment on a GPO. This is a feature that many Group Policy Administrators may not be aware of. This past summer I attended a presentation at TechEd on Group Policy. One organization in the crowd had over 5,000 Group Policies. In an environment like that, the comment section can be priceless. I always like to write in the comment section why I created the policy so I know its purpose next week after I've completed 50 other tasks and can't remember what I did 5 minutes ago. In the Group Policy module for PowerShell V3, th
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