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Microsoft SC-300 Exam - Topic 6 Question 73 Discussion

Actual exam question for Microsoft's SC-300 exam
Question #: 73
Topic #: 6
[All SC-300 Questions]

Your network contains an on-premises Active Directory domain that syncs to an Azure AD tenant.

Users sign in to computers that run Windows 10 and are joined to the domain.

You plan to implement Azure AD Seamless Single Sign-On (Azure AD Seamless SSO).

You need to configure the Windows 10 computers to support Azure AD Seamless SSO.

What should you do?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: A

Contribute your Thoughts:

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Billy
3 months ago
Wait, does this really work with just those settings? Sounds too easy!
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Bettina
4 months ago
D seems unnecessary for just SSO, right?
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Justine
4 months ago
I thought enabling Enterprise State Roaming was the answer?
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Dortha
4 months ago
Definitely B! That’s the way to go!
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Malcom
4 months ago
You need to modify the Local intranet zone settings for Azure AD SSO.
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Frank
4 months ago
Installing the Azure AD Connect Authentication Agent sounds familiar, but I thought that was more for hybrid setups rather than just enabling SSO.
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Jerry
5 months ago
I feel like enabling Enterprise State Roaming could be related, but I can't recall if it's necessary for Seamless SSO specifically.
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Lucy
5 months ago
I remember practicing a question about configuring sign-in options, so maybe option B is the right choice here?
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Carlton
5 months ago
I think we might need to modify the Local intranet zone settings, but I'm not entirely sure how that ties into Seamless SSO.
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Janna
5 months ago
This is a good test of our understanding of Oracle middleware deployment. I'll need to think through the details carefully to make sure I don't miss any important considerations.
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Arlene
5 months ago
This seems like a straightforward question. I would go with option A - navigating to the object in Solution Explorer and right-clicking to view the history. That seems like the most direct way to find the user who added the specific line of code.
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Loreta
5 months ago
I'm a bit confused by this question. I'm not sure which operator would be best to use in this situation. I'll have to do some research and see if I can figure it out.
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