I remember we discussed how important it is to set the right device types in the access policy, but I'm not sure which option is best for excluding the legacy app.
I'm feeling pretty confident about this one. Option B looks like the best approach - it covers all device types and uses a certificate-based authentication method with a fallback to password.
Okay, I think I've got a handle on this. The key is to set the policy to allow web browser access first, then add the other device types in the right order.
I'm a bit confused by the wording of the question. Does "without compromising use of the Workspace ONE Intelligent Hub app" mean we need to keep that app working, or prevent it from being used?
The Policy Verification landing page sounds like it's used to test if a user has the required access to a case, based on option A. That seems like the most likely purpose to me.
I'm not totally confident on this one. The options seem a bit tricky. I'll have to eliminate the ones that don't seem right and then make my best guess.
Okay, let me think this through. The server can't communicate over the network, but the admin can still access it. That rules out RDP and virtual console. Crash cart and local KVM also don't seem to fit. I'm going to go with out-of-band management as the most likely answer.
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