Whilethe project is conceptually strong and offers a wide range of well-developed renderings, it would greatly benefit from more consistent layout and information conveyed across the four sheets. The varied layouts make it challenging for a viewer to simply navigate. The sheets are also overwhelmingly dark in color. Rather than blackness the author might explore the positive effects of lighter colors and daylight. The texts would benefit from reduced length and larger font sizes. Nonetheless, the imagery is compelling and sophisticated.
The presentation assumes a clear and consistent layout that makes use of a primary image and a secondary detail or enlarged image within the same virtual space. The effect is like a magnifying glass, positively bringing clarity to the design intent. The accompanying texts, however, are rather long and winding, and could be improved through reduction and precision. The project simultaneously tackles many concepts and, while the presentation is ambitious and takes on many scales of thought, the author may consider distilling these ideas to yield a more powerful design statement.
The project offers some enticing visuals, but it suffers from overwhelming use of body text and lack of descriptive texts to clarify the images and diagrams. How has the form of this home been generated and how does this formal diagram relate to the development of the axonometrics, for instance? The author would benefit from greatly reducing the text, dividing it more evenly across the four sheets, while at the same time providing more specific annotation to clarify the concepts in each of the primary rendered images. Finally, while many of the images are individually powerful, there is little relationship among the layout of the four sheets, and a well-communicated project always benefits from general consistency.
THE HOUSTON BALLET Ball took place virtually on Friday night, with guests treated to lavish home deliveries of food, wine and other treats as ballet leaders and dancers presented a disco-themed program online.
Despite the setbacks, the program, intended this year to support the company's emergency relief efforts, was upbeat and fun. It began with a videotaped segment featuring ballet dancers in retro disco garb shake-shake-shaking it to "Stayin' Alive" in locales around Downtown's Theater District and on the plaza in front of the Wortham Theater Center, where the company typically performs. Connor Walsh, a company principal dancer decked out dashingly in black-tie, emceed with taped messages.
As the coronavirus lockdown has forced nearly every major sports broadcaster to work from home in recent weeks, content creators are discovering new tools that allow crews to produce, edit, manage, and deliver content reliably from the comfort of their own homes. Whether bleeding-edge technologies new to the broadcast community or well-established tools from traditional broadcast vendors, these tools are serving as a lifeline for sports-content creators to continue to serve fans during these unprecedented and challenging times.
AMPP is built on a microservices architecture based on five core technologies: fabric, timing, connectivity, identity, and streaming. In terms of cost structure, AMPP essentially functions as a series of metered microservices, and each tool (switcher, audio mixer, multiviewer, clip player) has a different metered rate associated with it. Therefore, the user is charged only for the features activated and the amount of time each feature is active. More on GV AMPP here.
The Use Case: The first application available for the platform, AMPP Master Control, has been on-air with Blizzard since the opening of the Overwatch League 2020 season in early February. Last month, when the coronavirus pandemic hit, Blizzard began using AMPP as the core of a new distributed-remote-production model to produce live Overwatch League (OWL) and Call of Duty League (CDL) matches with all operators and talent working from their respective homes.
vMix Software for Live Video Streaming
The Technology: The vMix Software video mixer and switcher is live-video-production software that allows content creators to produce, record, and live-stream in SD, HD, and 4K. vMix allows users to input cameras, graphics, replay/video clips, music, external streams, and other elements in order to produce a live show remotely.
In addition, the NFL Digital team has built out a production workflow using the vMix virtual-production system and StreamYard live-streaming studio software to handle their primary shows, including Around the NFL and Move the Sticks.
TVU Producer allows users without extensive training to take one or more TVU Anywhere live streams and do professional live video production. The cloud- and browser-based TVU Producer supports live video sharing to multiple locations, including social-media platforms Facebook Live, YouTube Live, Yahoo Live, CDNs, and websites. During the pandemic, religious organizations are using TVU Producer to reach their communities.
Due to the nature of this organisation, typically BYOD (personal devices) can be limited to browser-only access to SharePoint / OneDrive online through Azure Conditional Access Session Control; however there is an emerging use case for offline access on BYOD (the org already has a precedent of soft-managing BYO devices, so this part isn't a problem), but a requirement to ensure the files are kept securely.
This is where I feel WIP would provide suitable gap-filling capabilities; but there's quite a significant pre-requisite: It requires Windows 10 1607 Pro edition (or higher). The 1607 part of that isn't a big problem, as Intune can cater for version limits within enrolment policies, but there's no Edition filters/requirements.
This means we can set up WIP and MAM, and have all the nice secure controls applied to any BYO devices running Win 10 Pro, however as soon as someone enrols a Win 10 Home device, it simply ignores all of that and allows free-reign over non-encrypted files.
I'm trying to come up with workarounds to this gap, things like attempting to apply a BitLocker compliance policy specifically to Home edition devices, which of course will fail and mark the device as non-compliant (which can subsequently be filtered in Azure Conditional Access), but this isn't an elegant solution.
WIP is appealing for BYO scenarios since it only applies to corporate data / apps, rather than wholesale applying overbearing policies to every part of the device, specifically causing constraints in the context of encryption (requirement for MS accounts; requirement for InstantGo hardware certification etc).
It appears the trade-off of not implementing the overbearing policies is an incomplete picture, if those on a Home edition can simply bypass the policies - and there's no way to conditionally stop them.
Despite there being an "operatingSystemEdition" field within the hardwareInformation properties of managedDevices in Graph, Intune isn't filling this in, so we can't even create dynamic groups based on OS edition.
Where did you find that WIP only supports Windows 10 Pro and higher? For as I know is that WIP also Home Edition supports. With WIP you can manage your corporate data on Home edition. This only with MAM without enrollment. MDM is another story, but WIP and MAM without Enrollment on a Home edition is supported and works the same as a Windows 10 Pro edition.
That is strange. So, the same policy works on Pro but not on a Home edition device? With the same user account? I have here a Home edition test virtual machine. Windows 10 1803 is on this machine installed. If I enable the MAM without enrollment for Windows 10 then WIP will activated on the Home Edition machine. I have allowed IE, Edge, Word, Outlook, Onedrive and OneNote. I have also included these network perimeters: -
my.sharepoint.com.sharepoint.comoutlook.office365.com.
The basic polices I setup are pretty much the same as yours. But something is stopping Home from honoring MAM+WIP policies. Or it's plain broken. And nope - no MDM in sight anywhere. And even if there were, that Home just lets me extract work files unencrypted is unacceptable. Under ANY circumstances.
We use Microsoft 365 Business. The WIP policies it comes with include some protected apps by default, among which is the OneDrive STORE app, but not the desktop next-gen sync client. I have no idea why M365B doesn't include ODfB Sync by default, but it mislead me. Again. Because already solved this problem a few months ago. :rolling_on_the_floor_laughing:
And SECOND: The W10 Pro VM I used to test above ^^ is actually AAD-joined - which I didn't know. A colleague of mine was using it for other purposes and joined it. So it was following a different set of policies: For enrolled devices, right? That policy obviously works just fine, so it naturally showed WIP protection active. I just validated my findings with a new, un-enrolled (AAD registered, not joined) W10 Pro VM and was able to get the same, expected (!) behavior on Pro and Home.
So, all is good, WIP on W10 Home DOES work. Which makes this an awesome and low-cost option for any kind of BYOD / work from home requirement. Sorry to bug you but, sometimes you just need a sounding board to validate what you're doing - or not. ;)
@richochet If you're trying to block access from non-compliant devices (ie. ones not following WIP policies), you can use Conditional Access. CA will deny access to company resources at the cloud level - making it independent of the device used. Whether the device is compliant with your policies is only one criterion - there are many more, too. So for an environment where company-owned Windows Pro isn't the global standard, CA is probably the best approach IMHO. CA is included in M365BP, M365E3 and E5.
We have a great resource in Fort Wayne called 2GoFW, which is a Facebook group where you can find a list of all the local restaurants that are still open and see their hours. If you do venture out of the house, check that list before you go.
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