Your network contains a single Active Directory domain named contoso.com.
The domain contains a computer named Computer1.
You have five users configured as shown in the following table.
Which two users can add a Microsoft account to their Windows account, and then sign in to Cumputer1 by
using the Microsoft account?
A.
User1
B.
User2
C.
User3
D.
User4
E.
User5
Admin levels make sense seeing you will be given access to your
personal account.
I think its B & C (but not 100% sure)
anyone??
is B & C. You can link a Microsoft Account to a Domain Account, but you cannot then sign into the Domain Account with it. You can only do that with a Local User account.
B & C is correct
To be able to sign in to computer 1 you most be part of the domain, so the answer is user 4 and user 5… Once you are part of the domain you can sign in to computer 1
And once that u have logged in you can config your microsoft account and sign in with it
ups… i was wrong:
Provision Microsoft accounts in the enterprise
Microsoft accounts are private user accounts. There are no methods provided by Microsoft to provision Microsoft accounts for an enterprise. Enterprises should use domain accounts.
The correct answer is B and C… Doggy is the man!!!
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/access-protection/access-control/microsoft-accounts
by what i read in the article you shared – https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/access-protection/access-control/microsoft-accounts , you can configure the use of MS Accounts in Domain environment, and you DON’T have to be admin to do it
Configure connected accounts
Users can connect a Microsoft account to their domain account and synchronise the settings and preferences between them. This enables users to see the same desktop background, app settings, browser history and favourites, and other Microsoft account settings on their other devices.
I don’t think they give us enough information in the question to be sure what the answer is. The way I see it, accounts 2-5 should be able to link their MS account and log in with it later, including the domain ones(by default, as there are settings for blocking it)… I think B and C are the answer as well(as in this case you are going to be adding the MS to the Windows account, and not to the AD DS account), but I’m not sure…
I have tasted it myself… You just have to create an user account in windows 8.1 or win10 and u will see that u can create with an user acc the microsoft acc…
user 4 and user5 they are domain accounts, user1 user2 user3 are local account, user1 is a guest local account, therefore I will go with user2 and user3 as we all know after installing windows the account is not a guest.
Domain logons require DC authorization*, but with only my Microsoft account, how can my computer identify my associated domain account in order to ask the DC to log me on? *It could use cached credentials I guess, but then it would give me a way to bypass domain password policies – which do not apply to my MS account.
Does that make sense or have I gone mad?
I think it’s D and E
https://blog.thefullcircle.com/blog/2015/07/14/win10-ad-and-microsoft-account-synchronisation/
You can link Microsoft account with user’s account, but login with Microsoft account is possible only if account is linked with local user account