Reference Guide
Navigate the Dell Server
Windows Encryption
Policy-Based
Encryption
Secure Windows
Hibernation File
Not Selected Not Selected
Windows Encryption
Policy-Based
Encryption
Prevent Unsecured
Hibernation
Not Selected Not Selected
Windows Encryption
Policy-Based
Encryption
Enable Software Auto
Updates
Not Selected Not Selected
Windows Encryption BitLocker Encryption
BitLocker Encryption
Off Off
Windows Encryption Server Encryption
Server Encryption
Off Off
Threat Prevention
Advanced Threat
Protection
Advanced Threat
Protection
On On
Removable Media
Encryption
Mac Media Encryption
Mac Media Encryption
Off Off
Port Control
Windows Port Control
Port Control System
Disabled
Disabled
Persistent vs. Non-Persistent VDI
Persistent and Non-Persistent VDI endpoints differ in the following ways:
Persistent VDI Non-Persistent VDI
Persistent
endpoints may
exist for many days
to years.
Non-persistent
endpoints usually
exist only for a few
days or weeks.
Persistent
endpoints
retain the
configurations that
are set for the VM,
until the VM clone
pool is removed
and rebuilt.
Non-persistent
endpoints revert to
baseline settings
after a user logs
off.
A persistent
endpoint is
dedicated to a
single user.
After reverting to
baseline settings,a
non-persistent
endpoint is
available for
another user.
Endpoint Groups Specification
To skip to instructions about how to add an endpoint, see Add Endpoint Groups.
At deployment time, all endpoints belong to a default endpoint group, which is generally sufficient for
most deployments. This feature is used to assign policy to a specific group of endpoints. For instance,
you may want to create an endpoint group based on the locale that the operating system sends up in
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