This is great. I would like to see how this works without an on-prem AD component, however. That is - what if the only AD was Azure AD and there was no on-prem domain with AD Connect.
How is this better than just using AAD MFA? Just seems like Okta is an authentication provider configured to run next to an already functional and secure authentication provider.
Sorry I missed this comment. This video was created back in 2017 when Azure AD wasn't as feature rich as it is now. This video was created to demonstrate the differences in the Office 365 sign-in experience leveraging Okta vs Azure AD.
Hi Brian. could you list the permissions required by AAD connect service accounts. During my last engagement with you at Huntsman you did help me set up the two service accounts. It is possible for you to let me know again. Thanks.
Late reply to your comment, but there are powershell cmdlets specifically made for granting the necessary AD Connect service account permissions. You would not need to know the individual ones.
Great video Brian. Hope to see more technical videos as this. Thank you for posting ..
Woule appreciate more such videos, waiting for more, Thanks
Super informative video, thanks so much!
This is great. I would like to see how this works without an on-prem AD component, however. That is - what if the only AD was Azure AD and there was no on-prem domain with AD Connect.
How is this better than just using AAD MFA? Just seems like Okta is an authentication provider configured to run next to an already functional and secure authentication provider.
Sorry I missed this comment. This video was created back in 2017 when Azure AD wasn't as feature rich as it is now. This video was created to demonstrate the differences in the Office 365 sign-in experience leveraging Okta vs Azure AD.
Is this still current as of September 2021? What has change when it comes to MFA?
how can i set up this kind of lab?!
Hi Brian. could you list the permissions required by AAD connect service accounts. During my last engagement with you at Huntsman you did help me set up the two service accounts. It is possible for you to let me know again. Thanks.
Late reply to your comment, but there are powershell cmdlets specifically made for granting the necessary AD Connect service account permissions. You would not need to know the individual ones.
Video sound is very low