![]() Logging on to Microsoft Store for Business, I searched for the new Quick Assist app and added it. So this weekend, I set to work in my Intune lab to see if this theory was something that could be a possibility.ĭeploying the new Microsoft Store version of Quick Assist was simple (ok, I did this bit several weeks ago)… From using AppLocker to block the app, along with ensuring the basics such as restricted Local Admin, good threat detection and hardening Windows endpoints (just being a few off the top of my head) is configured. Over the years, there has been thoughts around how to manage the Quick Assist app in an enterprise environment. So after seeing that Microsoft had released a new version of Quick Assist, and reading that it is available via the Microsoft Store, I started thinking if I could use Intune to remove this new version of the App from Intune managed Windows devices. ![]() I have a few draft blogs which are starting to take the form of a series that my friend MVP Darrell Webster helped name “How I stay Intune”, but the last few months have been very busy (Work, home life – I’m a 100% single parent) and burn out is becoming a very real reality for me right now. It has been almost EIGHT weeks since I’ve written one, and that’s really too long. ![]() So this weekend, I sat down knowing I needed to blog. ![]()
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