Podcast appearances and mentions of joel rennich

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Best podcasts about joel rennich

Latest podcast episodes about joel rennich

Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 371: Just Us (& Joel Rennich)

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2024 75:32


It's just us this week, as we prepare for Penn State Mac Admins, as well as start the Beta Season. Here's everything we're thinking about as we get ready for the most exciting 3 months of Mac Admin life each year! Hosts: Tom Bridge - @tbridge@theinternet.social Marcus Ransom - @marcusransom Guests: Joel Rennich - LinkedIn Links: Apple's “Home on iPod” is Back | WIRED Home on the iPod | Macworld Sponsors: Kandji 1Password Watchman Monitoring If you're interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We're @MacAdmPodcast! The Mac Admins Podcast has launched a Patreon Campaign! Our named patrons this month include Weldon Dodd, Damien Barrett, Justin Holt, Chad Swarthout, William Smith, Stephen Weinstein, Seb Nash, Dan McLaughlin, Joe Sfarra, Nate Cinal, Jon Brown, Dan Barker, Tim Perfitt, Ashley MacKinlay, Tobias Linder Philippe Daoust, AJ Potrebka, Adam Burg, & Hamlin Krewson  

Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 345: Scott Reed & Joel Rennich on JumpCloud Go

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2023 73:20


Authentication is a big challenge for any organization - how do you decide who gets into what resource, with what security mechanism, and from what device? Hosts: Tom Bridge - @tbridge@theinternet.social Charles Edge - @cedge318 Marcus Ransom - @marcusransom Guests: Joel Rennich - LinkedIn Scott Reed - LinkedIn Links: The 1Pass sponsored directory: https://passkeys.directory/ JumpCloud Go: https://jumpcloud.com/support/get-started-jumpcloud-go PKCE Flow: https://oauth.net/2/pkce/ Amazon Verified Access: https://aws.amazon.com/verified-access/ Sponsors: Kandji Kolide Watchman Monitoring If you're interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We're @MacAdmPodcast! The Mac Admins Podcast has launched a Patreon Campaign! Our named patrons this month include Weldon Dodd, Damien Barrett, Justin Holt, Chad Swarthout, William Smith, Stephen Weinstein, Seb Nash, Dan McLaughlin, Joe Sfarra, Nate Cinal, Jon Brown, Dan Barker, Tim Perfitt, Ashley MacKinlay, Tobias Linder Philippe Daoust, AJ Potrebka, Adam Burg, & Hamlin Krewson  

MacDevOpsYVR podcast
Declarative MDO with Joel Rennich

MacDevOpsYVR podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2023 24:53


MacDevOps:YVR 2023 is a week away. MatX and JD are joined by Joel Rennich one of our speakers to chat about the upcoming ninth annual MDOYVR Conference, Hack Night, and some of what was seen at WWDC.

Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 318: MacAD.UK Panel 2023

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2023 33:12


Join Tom & Charles as they chat with Joel Rennich and Ben Toms at the 2023 MacAD.UK Conference in Brighton, England. Hosts: Tom Bridge - @tbridge@theinternet.social Charles Edge - @cedge318 Guests: Joel Rennich Ben Toms Transcript: Click here to read the transcript (brought to you this week by Alectrona) Sponsors: Kandji Kolide dataJAR Alectrona Watchman Monitoring If you're interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We're @MacAdmPodcast! The Mac Admins Podcast has launched a Patreon Campaign! Our named patrons this month include Weldon Dodd, Damien Barrett, Justin Holt, Chad Swarthout, William Smith, Stephen Weinstein, Seb Nash, Dan McLaughlin, Joe Sfarra, Nate Cinal, Jon Brown, Dan Barker, Tim Perfitt, Ashley MacKinlay, Tobias Linder Philippe Daoust, AJ Potrebka, Adam Burg, & Hamlin Krewson  

Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 279: XCreds Part II with Tim Perfitt

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 86:48


Tim Perfitt is back again to continue last week's episode about his latest macOS app; XCreds! If you've ever dealt with labs, this episode is for you. Hosts: Tom Bridge - @tbridge777 Marcus Ransom - @marcusransom Joel Rennich - @mactroll Guests: Tim Perfitt, Two Canoes - @tperfitt Transcript: Transcription of this episode brought to you by Meter.com Click here to read the transcript Links: Security. Cryptography. Whatever (Podcast) Filemaker 19 from Claris Azure AD SSO Plugin (Preview) Top 5 ways to Improve your Apple end user experience in M365/AAAD (PSU Mac Admins Talk with Michael Epping and Mark Morowczynski) XCreds Sponsors: Kandji Black Glove Mosyle Watchman Monitoring If you're interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We're @MacAdmPodcast! The Mac Admins Podcast has launched a Patreon Campaign! Our named patrons this month include Weldon Dodd, Damien Barrett, Justin Holt, Chad Swarthout, William Smith, Stephen Weinstein, Seb Nash, Dan McLaughlin, Joe Sfarra, Nate Cinal, Jon Brown, Dan Barker, Tim Perfitt, Ashley MacKinlay, Tobias Linder Philippe Daoust, AJ Potrebka, Adam Burg, & Hamlin Krewson

Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 278: XCreds with Tim Perfitt

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2022 82:31


Tim Perfitt rejoins the Pod to talk about a new project for macOS devices: XCreds! If you've ever dealt with labs, this episode is for you. Hosts: Tom Bridge - @tbridge777 Charles Edge - @cedge318 Joel Rennich - @mactroll Guests: Tim Perfitt, Two Canoes - @tperfitt Transcript: Transcription of this episode brought to you by Meter.com Click here to read the transcript Links: XCreds OIDC Lite ROPG Sneakers Sponsors: Kandji Black Glove Mosyle Watchman Monitoring If you're interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We're @MacAdmPodcast! The Mac Admins Podcast has launched a Patreon Campaign! Our named patrons this month include Weldon Dodd, Damien Barrett, Justin Holt, Chad Swarthout, William Smith, Stephen Weinstein, Seb Nash, Dan McLaughlin, Joe Sfarra, Nate Cinal, Jon Brown, Dan Barker, Tim Perfitt, Ashley MacKinlay, Tobias Linder Philippe Daoust, AJ Potrebka, Adam Burg, & Hamlin Krewson

MacDevOpsYVR podcast
MDOYVR 2022 Speaker series - Joel Rennich

MacDevOpsYVR podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 44:37


Joel Rennich, speaker at MacDevOps:YVR 2022, joins MatX and JD to talk auth, hiring, and 90s alt-rock references.

jd speaker series joel rennich
Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 236: Fall Conference Schedule

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2021 99:48


With Conferences coming back -- albeit mostly virtual! -- it's time to talk about what folks are excited for as we head into the season. There's three big conferences underway in October, from OBTS in Hawaii in person, to MacSysAdmin virtually in Sweden, and JNUC, virtually in Minneapolis. Hosts: Tom Bridge - @tbridge777 Marcus Ransom - @marcusransom Emily Kausalik-Whittle - @emilyooo James Smith - @smithjw Guests: Greg Neagle - @gregneagle Joel Rennich - @mactroll Ed Marczak - @marczak Links: https://www.loom.com https://reincubate.com/camo/ https://obsproject.com https://www.veed.io https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2017/110/ https://otter.ai/ https://www.macsysadmin.se https://mdoyvr.com https://macdeployment.ca  https://macadmins.psu.edu https://www.jamf.com/events/jamf-nation-user-conference/2021/ https://authenticatecon.com/event/authenticate-2021-conference/ Sponsors: Kandji Secureframe Alectrona Patch Watchman Monitoring If you're interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We're @MacAdmPodcast! The Mac Admins Podcast has launched a Patreon Campaign! Our named patrons this month include Weldon Dodd, Damien Barrett, Justin Holt, Chad Swarthout, William Smith, Stephen Weinstein, Seb Nash, Dan McLaughlin, Joe Sfarra, Nate Cinal, Jon Brown, Dan Barker, Tim Perfitt, Ashley MacKinlay, Tobias Linder Philippe Daoust, AJ Potrebka, Adam Burg, & Hamlin Krewson

The History of Computing
Spam Spam Spam!

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2021 11:42


Today's episode on spam is read by the illustrious Joel Rennich. Spam is irrelevant or inappropriate and unsolicited messages usually sent to a large number of recipients through electronic means. And while we probably think of spam as something new today, it's worth noting that the first documented piece of spam was sent in 1864 - through the telegraph. With the advent of new technologies like the fax machine and telephone, messages and unsolicited calls were quick to show up. Ray Tomlinson is widely accepted as the inventor of email, developing the first mail application in 1971 for the ARPANET. It took longer than one might expect to get abused, likely because it was mostly researchers and people from the military industrial research community. Then in 1978, Gary Thuerk at Digital Equipment Corporation decided to send out a message about the new VAX computer being released by Digital. At the time, there were 2,600 email accounts on ARPANET and his message found its way to 400 of them. That's a little over 15% of the Internet at the time. Can you imagine sending a message to 15% of the Internet today? That would be nearly 600 million people. But it worked. Supposedly he closed $12 million in deals despite rampant complaints back to the Defense Department. But it was too late; the damage was done. He proved that unsolicited junk mail would be a way to sell products. Others caught on. Like Dave Rhodes who popularized MAKE MONEY FAST chains in the 1988. Maybe not a real name but pyramid schemes probably go back to the pyramids so we might as well have them on the Internets. By 1993 unsolicited email was enough of an issue that we started calling it spam. That came from the Monty Python skit where Vikings in a cafe and spam was on everything on the menu. That spam was in reference to canned meat made of pork, sugar, water, salt, potato starch, and sodium nitrate that was originally developed by Jay Hormel in 1937 and due to how cheap and easy it was found itself part of a cultural shift in America. Spam came out of Austin, Minnesota. Jay's dad George incorporated Hormel in 1901 to process hogs and beef and developed canned lunchmeat that evolved into what we think of as Spam today. It was spiced ham, thus spam. During World War II, Spam would find its way to GIs fighting the war and Spam found its way to England and countries the war was being fought in. It was durable and could sit on a shelf for moths. From there it ended up in school lunches, and after fishing sanctions on Japanese-Americans in Hawaii restricted the foods they could haul in, spam found its way there and some countries grew to rely on it due to displaced residents following the war. And yet, it remains a point of scorn in some cases. As the Monty Python sketch mentions, spam was ubiquitous, unavoidable, and repetitive. Same with spam through our email. We rely on email. We need it. Email was the first real, killer app for the Internet. We communicate through it constantly. Despite the gelatinous meat we sometimes get when we expect we're about to land that big deal when we hear the chime that our email client got a new message. It's just unavoidable. That's why a repetitive poster on a list had his messages called spam and the use just grew from there. Spam isn't exclusive to email. Laurence Canter and Martha Siegel sent the first commercial Usenet spam in the “Green Card” just after the NSF allowed commercial activities on the Internet. It was a simple Perl script to sell people on the idea of paying a fee to have them enroll people into the green card lottery. They made over $100,000 and even went so far as to publish a book on guerrilla marketing on the Internet. Canter got disbarred for illegal advertising in 1997. Over the years new ways have come about to try and combat spam. RBLs, or using DNS blacklists to mark hosts as unable to send blacklists and thus having port 25 blocked emerged in 1996 from the Mail Abuse Prevention System, or MAPS. Developed by Dave Rand and Paul Vixie, the list of IP addresses helped for a bit. That is, until spammers realized they could just send from a different IP. Vixie also mentioned the idea of of matching a sender claim to a mail server a message came from as a means of limiting spam, a concept that would later come up again and evolve into the Sender Policy Framework, or SPF for short. That's around the same time Steve Linford founded Spamhaus to block anyone that knowingly spams or provides services to spammers. If you have a cable modem and try to setup an email server on it you've probably had to first get them to unblock your address from their Don't Route list. The next year Mark Jeftovic created a tool called filter.plx to help filter out spam and that project got picked up by Justin Mason who uploaded his new filter to SourceForge in 2001. A filter he called SpamAssassin. Because ninjas are cooler than pirates. Paul Graham, the co-creator of Y Combinator (and author a LISP-like programming language) wrote a paper he called “A Plan for Spam” in 2002. He proposed using a Bayesian filter as antivirus software vendors used to combat spam. That would be embraced and is one of the more common methods still used to block spam. In the paper he would go into detail around how scoring of various words would work and probabilities that compared to the rest of his email that a spam would get flagged. That Bayesian filter would be added to SpamAssassin and others the next year. Dana Valerie Reese came up with the idea for matching sender claims independently and she and Vixie both sparked a conversation and the creation of the Anti-Spam Research Group in the IETF. The European Parliament released the Directive on Privacy and Electronic Communications in the EU criminalizing spam. Australia and Canada followed suit. 2003 also saw the first laws in the US regarding spam. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 was signed by President George Bush in 2003 and allowed the FTC to regulate unsolicited commercial emails. Here we got the double-opt-in to receive commercial messages and it didn't take long before the new law was used to prosecute spammers with Nicholas Tombros getting the dubious honor of being the first spammer convicted. What was his spam selling? Porn. He got a $10,000 fine and six months of house arrest. Fighting spam with laws turned international. Christopher Pierson was charged with malicious communication after he sent hoax emails. And even though spammers were getting fined and put in jail all the time, the amount of spam continued to increase. We had pattern filters, Bayesian filters, and even the threat of legal action. But the IETF Anti-Spam Research Group specifications were merged by Meng Weng Wong and by 2006 W. Schlitt joined the paper to form a new Internet standard called the Sender Policy Framework which lives on in RFC 7208. There are a lot of moving parts but at the heart of it, Simple Mail Transfer Protocol, or SMTP, allows sending mail from any connection over port 25 (or others if it's SSL-enabled) and allowing a message to pass requiring very little information - although the sender or sending claim is a requirement. A common troubleshooting technique used to be simply telnetting into port 25 and sending a message from an address to a mailbox on a mail server. Theoretically one could take the MX record, or the DNS record that lists the mail server to deliver mail bound for a domain to and force all outgoing mail to match that. However, due to so much spam, some companies have dedicated outbound mail servers that are different than their MX record and block outgoing mail like people might send if they're using personal mail at work. In order not to disrupt a lot of valid use cases for mail, SPF had administrators create TXT records in DNS that listed which servers could send mail on their behalf. Now a filter could check the header for the SMTP server of a given message and know that it didn't match a server that was allowed to send mail. And so a large chunk of spam was blocked. Yet people still get spam for a variety of reasons. One is that new servers go up all the time just to send junk mail. Another is that email accounts get compromised and used to send mail. Another is that mail servers get compromised. We have filters and even Bayesian and more advanced forms of machine learning. Heck, sometimes we even sign up for a list by giving our email out when buying something from a reputable site or retail vendor. Spam accounts for over 90% of the total email traffic on the Internet. This is despite blacklists, SPF, and filters. And despite the laws and threats spam continues. And it pays well. We mentioned Canter & Sigel. Shane Atkinson was sending 100 million emails per day in 2003. That doesn't happen for free. Nathan Blecharczyk, a co-founder of Airbnb paid his way through Harvard on the back of spam. Some spam sells legitimate products in illegitimate ways, as we saw with early IoT standard X10. Some is used to spread hate and disinformation, going back to Sender Argic, known for denying the Armenian genocide through newsgroups in 1994. Long before infowars existed. Peter Francis-Macrae sent spam to solicit buying domains he didn't own. He was convicted after resorting to blackmail and threats. Jody Michael Smith sold replica watches and served almost a year in prison after he got caught. Some spam is sent to get hosts loaded with malware so they could be controlled as happened with Peter Levashov, the Russian czar of the Kelihos botnet. Oleg Nikolaenko was arrested by the FBI in 2010 for spamming to get hosts in his Mega-D botnet. The Russians are good at this; they even registered the Russian Business Network as a website in 2006 to promote running an ISP for phishing, spam, and the Storm botnet. Maybe Flyman is connected to the Russian oligarchs and so continues to be allowed to operate under the radar. They remain one of the more prolific spammers. Much is sent by a small number of spammers. Khan C. Smith sent a quarter of the spam in the world until he got caught in 2001 and fined $25 million. Again, spam isn't limited to just email. It showed up on Usenet in the early days. And AOL sued Chris “Rizler” Smith for over $5M for his spam on their network. Adam Guerbuez was fined over $800 million dollars for spamming Facebook. And LinkedIn allows people to send me unsolicited messages if they pay extra, probably why Microsoft payed $26 billion for the social network. Spam has been with us since the telegraph; it isn't going anywhere. But we can't allow it to run unchecked. The legitimate organizations that use unsolicited messages to drive business help obfuscate the illegitimate acts where people are looking to steal identities or worse. Gary Thuerk opened a Pandora's box that would have been opened if hadn't of done so. The rise of the commercial Internet and the co-opting of the emerging cyberspace as a place where privacy and so anonymity trump verification hit a global audience of people who are not equal. Inequality breeds crime. And so we continually have to rethink the answers to the question of sovereignty versus the common good. Think about that next time an IRS agent with a thick foreign accent calls asking for your social security number - and remember (if you're old enough) that we used to show our social security cards to grocery store clerks when we wrote checks. Can you imagine?!?!

Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 201: NoMAD 2

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2021 87:49


In this episode, Joel Rennich joins to explain what went into NoMAD 2, why it happened, and what that means for the future of Jamf Connect. Guest: Joel Rennich, Jamf - @mactroll Hosts: Tom Bridge - @tbridge777 Marcus Ransom - @marcusransom Charles Edge - @cedge318 Links: NoMAD 2 Joel on Twitter Carthage Sponsors: VMWare Workspace One Halp Watchman Monitoring If you're interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We're @MacAdmPodcast!

nomad jamf charles edge joel rennich
Root Causes: A PKI and Security Podcast
Root Causes 122: Passwordless Authentication for Apple OS

Root Causes: A PKI and Security Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2020 32:54


Our hosts are joined by Joel Rennich of Jamf to talk about passwordless authentication and access for various Apple platforms. Joel explains the variety of user experiences that can qualify as passwordless access, with an eye to the specific needs and opportunities for Apple devices.

MacDevOpsYVR podcast
Hack-A-Thon-Ing with Joel Rennich

MacDevOpsYVR podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2020 72:40


Joel Rennich joins Mat, Shania & JD to talk Linda Tripp, being an AP reporter, and how that brings us to virtual Hack-a-thon-ing at MacDevOps.

Apple @ Work
Apple @ Work Podcast: FIDO Alliance and the future of passwords

Apple @ Work

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 22:04


Apple @ Work Podcast is brought to you by Jamf, the standard for Apple in the enterprise. Learn more at Jamf.com/9to5mac. In this episode of the Apple @ Work podcast, Bradley is joined by Joel Rennich to discuss the FIDO Alliance and the future of password management for the enterprise and consumers. Links Mentioned in this episode FIDO Alliance Jamf Connect NoMAD Jamf acquires NoMAD Connect with Bradley Twitter LinkedIn Listen and Subscribe Apple Podcasts Overcast Spotify Pocket Casts Castro RSS

Jamf After Dark
Identity Buzzwording with Joel Rennich

Jamf After Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2020 53:44


Join us for the latest episode of the Jamf After Dark Podcast. In this episode we have Joel Rennich back to take us through demystifying much of what a “modern” identity really means in the back-end. It’s a pretty technical episode. But don’t worry, Joel does a great job explaining it all in a way that even Charles can understand. Also, it’s worth noting that the Jamf ID is shipping on February 21st, not January 21st. Apologies for that!

identity apologies joel rennich
Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 117: Live from London

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2019 44:34


  SYNOPSIS: Tom jetted off to England for the MacAD.UK conference, where he met up with Ben Toms of Datajar, Graham Gilbert of Airbnb and Joel Rennich of Jamf to talk about the state of macOS Management, what folks are hoping for this summer at WWDC, and how the conference went. There are NO April Fools’ Jokes in this podcast. YOUR HOSTS: Tom Bridge, Partner, Technolutionary LLC [@tbridge] OUR GUESTS: Ben Toms, Technical Director, datajar ltd. [@macmuleblog] Graham Gilbert, Systems Architect, Airbnb [@grahamgilbert] Joel Rennich, Nomad, Jamf [@mactroll] PRESENTING SPONSOR: VMWARE WORKSPACE ONE VMware Workspace ONE empowers you with full macOS lifecycle management. Get past the hassles of legacy imaging with faster modern onboarding. Easily deliver all your native Mac app packages as well as SaaS and virtual Windows apps, and empower users with one-click single sign on. Stay on top of your security needs with complete encryption management and rich conditional access. The recognized industry leading unified endpoint management solution is your one stop for all Apple devices and apps. Learn more at www.workspaceone.com LISTEN! LINKS & NOTES MacADUK Conference SUPPORTING SPONSORS Start a 30-day no-string-attached trial of SimpleMDM today! Use code MACADMINS at checkout, good for 50% off your first month of a Mac mini subscription! Conference Sites ACEs Conference - Kansas City, MO - 5-6 June 2019 - $699 (Basic Event Ticket) | MacDeployment Conference - Calgary, Canada - 10-11 June 2019 - TBA | MacDevOps:YVR - Vancouver, Canada - 12-14 June, 2019 - $275CAD - $495CAD | X World - Sydney, NSW, Australia - 26-28 June 2019 - $699 AUD Early Bird | MacAdmins Conference - State College, PA - 9-12 July 2019 - Call For Presenters Open | Jamf Nation User Conference - Minneapolis, MN - 12-14 November 2019 - $799 Early Bird Rate ($699 for EDU) | Meetups San Diego Mac Admins - Interlaced, Downtown SD - 10 April 2019, 6:00 p.m. PT - Free | University of Utah Apple Admins - University of Utah Marriott Library - 17 April 2019, 11:00 a.m. MT - Free | Austin Apple Admins - Cloudflare - 17 April 2019, 6:30 p.m. CST - Free | Apple Admins of the Pacific Northwest - Location TBA - 18 April 2019, 6:00 p.m. PT - Free | PATREON SPONSORS The Mac Admins Podcast has launched a Patreon Campaign! Our named patrons this month include Randy Wong, Chad Swartwout, Jonathan Spiva, William Smith, Justin Holt, Weldon Dodd, Jon Brown, Randy Wong, Dan Collings, Jason Dettbarn and Seb Nash. Thanks everyone!   RATE US ON ITUNES! Rate Us On Apple Podcasts! SPONSOR MAC ADMINS PODCAST! If you’re interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. SOCIAL MEDIA Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We’re @MacAdmPodcast!

Jamf After Dark
Newsflash: Joel Rennich Tells Us All About Jamf Connect

Jamf After Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 35:11


Jamf completed the acquisition of Orchard & Grove last week, which brings NoMAD Login into the Jamf family, now called Jamf Connect! In this newsflash, Annie Halbert and Charles Edge interview Joel Rennich, and cover the products, the people, Okta, Smart Cards, what happens to existing NoMAD customers, what happens to the open source project, and a little bit of a sneak peak into what customers can expect in the future. 

nomad newsflash okta jamf charles edge joel rennich
Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 82: Hope is a Cruel Mistress, Live at MacDevOps YVR

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2018 63:00


SYNOPSIS: Live at Mac Dev Ops! Dana Campbell of Slack, Joel Rennich of Orchard & Grove, and Mat X of the Mac Dev Ops YVR conference join Tom Bridge and Diana Birsan to look at what we know so far about macOS Mojave. YOUR HOSTS: Tom Bridge, Partner at Technolutionary LLC [@tbridge] Diana Birsan, Security Culture Lead, Shopify [@miss_limesplash] GUESTS: Dana Campbell, Global IT Manager, Slack [@danajc] Mat X, Mac Dev Ops YVR [@MacDevOpsYVR] Joel Rennich, Chief Instigator at Orchard & Grove [@mactroll] PRESENTING SPONSOR: VMWARE WORKSPACE ONE VMware Workspace ONE empowers you with full macOS lifecycle management. Get past the hassles of legacy imaging with faster modern onboarding. Easily deliver all your native Mac app packages as well as SaaS and virtual Windows apps, and empower users with one-click single sign on. Stay on top of your security needs with complete encryption management and rich conditional access. The recognized industry leading unified endpoint management solution is your one stop for all Apple devices and apps. Learn more at www.workspaceone.com LISTEN! LINKS & NOTES WebKit’s new Tracking Prevention 2.0 Good running Google Doc here with Q&A onsite thanks to Sergio WWDC Platform State of the Union Your Apps and the Future of macOS Security What’s new in Managing Apple Devices SUPPORTING SPONSORS The Mac Admins Podcast is sponsored this week by Spoke Click through for a free 30-day trial of Spoke! PATREON SPONSORS The Mac Admins Podcast has launched a Patreon Campaign! Our named patrons this month include William Smith, Jonathan Spiva, Graham Gilbert, Justin Holt and Dan Collings. Thanks everyone! COMMUNITY CALENDAR, SPONSORED BY WATCHMAN MONITORING Conference Sites ​ X World in Sydney Australia, June 27-29, 2018 — Tickets now on sale! Penn State University Mac Admins in State College, PA July 10th-13th MacSysdamin in Göteborg, Sweden, October 2-5, 2018 Jamf Nation User Conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota, October 23-25, 2018 MacTech Conference in Los Angeles, CA, November 6-9, 2018 Meetups Austin Apple Admins will meet on June 20th at Perry–Castañeda Library at the University of Texas at 6:30pm Look for a location announcement for the Apple Admins of Seattle meetup for Thursday, June 21. Ask in the #cascadia channel for more details. MacDMV will meet next in July, Time and date TBD, ask @tbridge for more information. RATE US ON ITUNES! Give Us Five Stars! SPONSOR MAC ADMINS PODCAST! If you’re interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. SOCIAL MEDIA Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We’re @MacAdmPodcast!