While generally true, the gap as of R2 SP1 is almost non-existent will slowly grow over time again until v.Next. You must also consider the reverse however as there are things you can do in ConfigMgr that you can’t do in Intune including having rich dynamically populated collections. The Groups in stand-alone Intune are very basic. Combine that with single pane of glass management and unified reporting, hybrid wins (IMO.
J From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Dwayne Allen Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2015 8:38 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [mssms] Intune / Do you use it? Our Mobility team is looking into it. (Our O365 team bought the Enterprise Mobility Suite so they are probably going to end up using it whether they like it or not since it is paid for already.) But we SCCM engineers haven't been too involved outside of a few meetings. There is supposed to be a much tighter integration in the vNext version of SCCM. Right now the features between the standalone Intune and the Intune\SCCM hybrid get out of sync. So the feeling that I get is that they are waiting for the next version of SCCM to come out and for us to get it implemented before jumping in. You have to have integration with SCCM to do very much automation, but right now the hybrid model often lags the standalone model in getting new features. And there is no easy way to go back to standalone if you decide there is a feature there you really need. Once you're hybrid, there isn't supposed to be any going back, but I've heard that can depend on the size of your contract :) ----- Dwayne Allen [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> (479) 310-0027 On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 7:46 AM, Robert Spinelli <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: Just curious how many people are using Intune on here, and what is your opinion on it. Thanks Rob
