The Ultimate Intune Troubleshooting Guide: How It Works and How I Fix It Intune Troubleshooting

The Ultimate Intune Troubleshooting Guide: How It Works and How I Fix It

The Ultimate Intune Troubleshooting Guide: How It Works and How I Fix It

In this blog post I explain how I approach Intune troubleshooting from end to end. This is not a list of error codes you can already find in the docs — it is the full picture: how Intune actually works under the hood, how a device proves who it is, where the logs live, which tools I reach for, and a clear method I follow every time. When you understand how a device talks to Intune, most problems stop being a mystery. You stop guessing and you start reading the right log, which is what real Intune troubleshooting is about.

This is a long one, on purpose. I wanted the single Intune troubleshooting guide I can send to a colleague and say “read this and you can fix most things yourself.” So we go all the way down — including the new MMP-C and Declared Configuration plumbing that almost no admin knows is already running on their devices — and then back up to the errors you hit most.

A note on honesty before we start: a lot of the deepest details here are not in the official Microsoft docs. They were reverse-engineered by people like Rudy Ooms, Oliver Kieselbach and Michael Niehaus. I will say clearly when something is community knowledge rather than documented, because internals like this change between Windows builds. Let us start with the part most guides skip — the mental model.

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AI-Driven Endpoint Management: The Future with Intune

AI-Driven Endpoint Management: The Future with Intune

AI-Driven Endpoint Management: The Future with Intune

Endpoint management has come a long way from the days of manual, on-premises processes. In today’s world where employees work from home, on the road, or in branch offices, IT teams need tools that are not only powerful but also flexible and intelligent. Microsoft’s journey from Configuration Manager (SCCM) to Intune, and now toward AI-driven automation, shows how we can bridge legacy systems with cloud innovation to deliver seamless, secure, and proactive device management.

Laptop showing cloud device management dashboard
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GPT Remediation creator

GPT Remediation creator

GPT Remediation creator

The GPT Remediation creator helps you tackle one of the trickiest parts of modern client management: remediations play a pivotal role in proactively identifying and resolving end-user issues. Additionally, they serve as a valuable tool for enforcing specific settings or configurations that may not be natively supported in Microsoft Intune. However, the process of crafting these scripts can often be intricate and time-consuming.

Imagine a solution where you can simply describe your desired configurations, and a tool generates the necessary scripts for you. If you find this idea appealing and are keen to explore such a solution, this blog is tailored to meet your exact needs.

GPT Remediation creator results in the web interface
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Manage and Enroll macOS Devices with Microsoft Intune

Manage and Enroll macOS Devices with Microsoft Intune

Manage and Enroll macOS Devices with Microsoft Intune

Mac management in Microsoft Intune has become a key topic for many IT teams, and in this guide I will walk you through it step by step. I have already described in one of my first blogs how you can set up an Intune development environment and enroll Windows devices via Autopilot and manage them. Apart from Windows, you can also manage iOS, Android and MacOS very well with Intune. Apple offers a good interface (MDM Protocol) to manage MacOS devices, unfortunately not all options are supported with Intune. Also in the WWDC22 there was some great new features introduced.

MacOS support was added to Intune back in 2015. At that time, Mac management in Microsoft Intune was still very limited – something that has changed a lot in the meantime. The number of companies using Mac devices is growing more and more, as is the general market share of macOS compared to Windows. This was around 3% in 2009 and has risen to 15% today (2022). Of course, Windows is still in front, but a clear trend can be seen, and that is exactly why Mac management in Microsoft Intune matters more every year.

There are a lot of worthy blogs that deal with the topic of Mac management in Microsoft Intune:

Just to name a few. Of course there are some great other blogs.

In this blog I want to give you a step by step guide on how to enroll a macOS device in Intune. This is the foundation of Mac management in Microsoft Intune, and there will be more blogs in the future on the topic of managing macOS with Intune.

Microsoft Intune macOS device management setup screen
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Microsoft Intune App Management: Ultimate MEM Tour Part 2

Microsoft Intune App Management: Ultimate MEM Tour Part 2

Microsoft Intune App Management: Ultimate MEM Tour Part 2

Welcome to the next stop on the Ultimate MEM Tour. In this blog series, I’ll give you a tour through the features that Microsoft Intune offers us. In my first MEM Tour blog we looked at the Device Management features. In this part of the MEM Tour I want to cover all the features around Application Management. Good apps are one of the foundations of a successful company. With Intune, you can ensure that end users have access to the apps they need to do their jobs.

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Microsoft Endpoint Manager Devices: Complete MEM Tour

Ultimate MEM Tour Part 1: Microsoft Intune Devices

Ultimate MEM Tour Part 1: Microsoft Intune Devices

According to the Gartner quadrant published on August 16, Microsoft is by far the leader in the area of unified endpoint management tools, and managing Microsoft Intune Devices sits at the heart of that success. Microsoft Intune has played a major role in achieving this clear ranking. Intune has grown more and more in recent years and has received more and more new functions. According to rumors, we can soon expect support for Chrome OS (source: twitter).

This blog is the first blog of a whole blog series. In this blog series, I want to give you a tour of all the features that Microsoft Intune has to offer, starting with everything around Microsoft Intune Devices.

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Enable Tab groups in MS Edge Chromium

Enable Tab groups in MS Edge Chromium

Enable Tab groups in MS Edge Chromium

Microsoft Edge Chromium has shipped a steady stream of productivity features that quietly transform daily work — vertical tabs, sleeping tabs, workspaces — but they often don’t surface to enterprise users until an admin enables them. Tab Groups in MS Edge Chromium is the example I keep coming back to: a tiny UX change that helps research-heavy users keep their browsing sessions sane. This post shows how to enable Tab Groups in MS Edge Chromium (and the related grouping behaviour) for the entire fleet through Microsoft Intune, with the recommended baseline and how to scope it per user group.

Tab groups are a useful feature in the Edge browser that I have become very accustomed to and that makes my work much easier. Note: this guide is from 2021 and Tab Groups in MS Edge Chromium are now a standard feature, so these flag steps may no longer be necessary. Originally, this feature was not yet active by default and was located in the experimental features of the Edge browser. In this blog I explain how you can activate this feature.

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