ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú

ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú’s Apple MDM Solution

Written by Scott Reed on May 21, 2020

Share This Article

Apple MDM is part of ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú’s robust system management platform. This feature simplifies work for administrators managing Mac fleets, from the ease of an all-in-one platform that also lets admins manage and secure Windows and Linux devices, wherever they are. 

Feature update: You can now enroll all your Mac systems in a few clicks and easily migrate them to ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú MDM with our new .

Use this policy to remotely enroll Mac systems in ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú’s MDM by installing the ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú enrollment profile on targeted systems across your organization. The policy lets you seamlessly shift devices from existing MDM profiles to consolidate your tech stack and use ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú’s MDM offering.

Once systems are enrolled, you can execute security commands to lock, restart, shut down, or wipe Macs, wherever they are online. (To use this policy, you must first configure your ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú organization for MDM.)

Let’s take a look at how you enable Apple MDM in ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú for macOS.

How it Works

ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú admins register their organization as an MDM Server with Apple in a few clicks and unlock system management capabilities only available through Apple MDM, including remote lock, restart, shutdown, and wipe.

Admins then quickly bulk enroll their macOS systems into ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú Apple MDM using the existing to deploy their organization’s MDM enrollment profile. 

Why It Matters 

One of the coolest things about this new feature is the ability for admins to enact zero-touch enrollment. Automated Device Enrollment is available via integration with Apple Business Manager and Apple School Manager.

Admins using Apple MDM will also get granular monitoring and reporting using the event logging service in Directory Insights:

{
  “mdm_type”: “apple”,
  “request_type”: “DeviceLock”,
  “device_manager_object_id”: “5e95d0a128b4f8666ef26b87”,
  “command”: {
    “pin”: “603327d15366c6f2a21e29aad90188596030931bfe13c61d2e47082120b0722e”,
    “request_type”: “DeviceLock”
  },
  “event_type”: “mdm_command_result”,
  “command_uuid”: “f8e94ca2-97b9-4319-866a-c3438a5bf9d1”,
  “service”: “mdm”,
  “organization”: “5c71807298ce437512b9e8b7”,
  “@version”: “1”,
  “device_object_id”: “5ebeb092658f7304f48e2d84”,
  “error_chain”: null,
  “id”: “5ebef5995ce382052f6d2623”,
  “timestamp”: “2020-05-15T20:03:37.399619041Z”,
  “status”: “Acknowledged”
}

What’s Next

Admins using ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú for Apple MDM will continue to see new innovations coming out of this integration. I’ll also be answering questions about this feature during ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú Office Hours on Friday June 17th. If you don’t have a ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú account, you can .

Scott Reed

Scott Reed is a Product Manager on the Devices team at ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú. Prior to joining the Product team, he led the Solution Architecture team at ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú. In fact, Scott is the original author of the ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú PowerShell module. Scott’s background is in Corporate IT. Outside of work Scott loves to seek out fresh air and adventure with his wife, two young sons, and their black lab Lucy.

Continue Learning with our Newsletter