October 19, 2016
Earlier this month Microsoft released MIM 2016 SP1
But what does this mean for you?
Biggest Implications
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Exchange Online (Office365) for the MIM Service
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without losing the ability to approve requests from within Outlook, and the requesting of groups within Outlook.
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Since lots of orgs are using Office 365 no more embarrassing conversations about these great features you can’t have.
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Support for other browsers for MIM Portal
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SSPR already supported other browsers but now MIM Portal will support Chrome, Firefox and Safari.
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This means less customer resistance
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Platform Support – MIM now supports all of the latest platforms Windows 2016, Active Directory 2016, SQL 2016, SharePoint 2016, Exchange 2016.
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Sync, Service and Portal
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Can now run on these
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Portal can now run on SharePoint 2016
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But there is not a foundations version meaning a free version
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So keep running on SharePoint 2013 Foundations for now unless MSFT starts including a license for SharePoint 2016
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You can use MIM, but the default is the new built in Active Directory Import
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If you do use MIM to synch to SharePoint check Spencer Harbar’s notes
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BHOLD
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The supported platform page lists that with MIM 2016 SP1 BHOLD now supports SQL 2014
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Say what? Why not SQL 2016? is this an error? If true this implies that BHOLD isn’t as highly prioritized.
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MIM Certificate Management
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Lists the only supported client as Windows 7
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Again – if true this suggest lower priority. In general most new MFA solutions aren’t using smart cards and certs.
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PAM now supports Windows Server 2016 and forest functional level 2016
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Kerberos tickets are now time limited based on the time left on your role activation
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Improved security!
Finally, look at Jorge’s screenshot by screenshot post on how to upgrade
http://feeds.feedburner.com/IdentityLifecycleManagerilmBestPractices