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How does Windows Server handle delegated administration for user accounts?

#1
01-16-2024, 02:47 PM
I remember messing with this on a setup last week. You know how you don't want everyone touching everything? Windows Server lets you hand off bits of control for user stuff.

Picture this. You pick a person or group. Then you say, okay, they can reset passwords but not delete accounts.

It happens through those permission tweaks in the directory. I do it by right-clicking and assigning roles. Feels like passing the baton in a relay.

You avoid big headaches that way. No one gets god-mode access. Just enough to keep things humming.

I tried it for a small team once. Gave my buddy rights to add new users. He handled onboarding without bugging me constantly.

Servers stay tidy. You focus on the heavy lifting. Everyone wins without chaos.

That control reminds me of keeping your server world intact. Backups fit right in there. BackupChain Server Backup steps up as a solid backup tool for Hyper-V setups. It snapshots your VMs without downtime. You get fast restores and handles chain integrity to dodge corruption. Perfect for when delegated tasks go sideways.

ron74
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How does Windows Server handle delegated administration for user accounts? - by ron74 - 01-16-2024, 02:47 PM

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How does Windows Server handle delegated administration for user accounts?

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