


PS: I’d prefer to do most part of this from MY MACHINE, except for the EVENTUAL NATIVE BOOT for which I will have to be there in PERSON (Unavoidable at Booting?). In person task (maybe possible to minimize in Person by configuring some remote stuff) But this is usually TUNED to a SPECIFIC PATH on my machine. – I’ve also found some Powershell/ BAT script commands to invoke and call BCDBOOT to create the boot entry. – When I do this for my own machine it’s simpler: Either using BCDBOOT.EXE or EasyBCD at times. Is there some smart way/ tool of doing this? Or do I have remotely log into each and create a shared folder/ drive to drop the VHD or broadcast/ multi cast it? – Since most machines are GigE and dont have USB 3 I’d prefer to Broadcast/ Multicast/ Copy over the network – Preferably driven from Domain\Administrator side. – One of these tasks is to drop a VHD (Mostly 7/8/10 based) to the C or D or E drive of the Machine, Set it up for Native Boot and run it to execute some stuff – And later Disable this to prevent misuse?

– How can I enable them for access across the Domain so that I can log in as Domain\Admin for some night time tasks & cleanup activity? Although the majority of users are on newer operating systems, the billions of active Windows devices worldwide means there could still be millions of people using devices that are insecure and open to attack.– Terminal Services/ Remote Services are not enabled Roel Decneut, chief marketing officer at Lansweeper, stated the obvious: "The situation poses a significant cybersecurity risk. With almost one in 10 Windows devices running end-of-life software, opportunities for miscreants abound.

Even Windows Server 2003 was still hanging on in there. Windows Server 2008 accounted for 0.57 per cent of the PCs in the report despite also being well out of mainstream support. Both are out of support, although Microsoft will keep security patches coming for the latter – at a price.Įven more disturbing are those mystery beige boxes in the server room that nobody likes to talk about. Windows XP accounted for 3.62 per cent of PCs in the survey and Windows 7 was a hair under 6 per cent.
