Cisco Asdm Windows 8.1
So is it going to happen with 8.1 or not? Getting tired of waiting my RT has been gathering dust other than business trips the device is of no use if i can't remote in to my work PC where all my docs are located I can remote in using our work vpn on pretty much any other device I have except the Surface RT like my ipad mini, mobile etc etc close to biting the bullet and giving up and just getting a new 12 hr Mac Air 13' and run it in split OS which due to its battery life is a better investment than a pro. The new sony ultrathin laptop with its long battery life is also a consideration.
Cisco has upgraded the Jars on the SFR to support this. So the fix went in SFR codebase not in ASDM. So upgrade SFR to version 6.1.0 in order to launch the ASDM under Win10. The bug is nothing to do with the ASDM so upgrading only the ASDM image wont help.
Is this just another toy/playbook or a true laptop replacement? Still hoping. I feel as a Surface RT user that there are times where I feel this device is too scatter-brained. Sometimes it's just confusing what to make of the tablet. 'It's for productivity!' Awesome, except there is no domain support, limited third party VPN, and no *legal* licensing to use Office for commercial use.
Why alienate loyal Microsoft supporters that want to buy and tell the world about how awesome the Surface is? And so people will read the above and say, 'that's what the Pro is for.' The Pro is as robust as an ultrabook, but with the battery and price it misses the mark as to why the RT is the almost-perfect device to take to meetings. I just don't get it. There is a limbo between the RT and Pro world with very real demand and opportunity and and I hope Microsoft steps up to the challenge and makes it happen.
The license terms grant you commercial office access if you have a 365 account so I'm covered there. Honestly never had a need for AD integration as I am disconnected from the domain anyways. Domains are being obscured by cloud services anyways which are federated on the back end for authentication which is all you really need. The problem with IT shops is they are stuck in a rut with reading off of spec sheets and if it doesn't do that thing EXACTLY they write it off. Surface does a bunch of that stuff, just differently. We are able to confirm that the built-in L2TP/IPsec client on the Surface can be used in conjunction with an ASA that is appropriately configured for this support.
This testing was performed in conjunction with ASA 8.4.5 & 9.0.1 We are in the process of updating our compatibility chart, but this will function today IF the ASA is appropriately configured for this support. We are not able to support AnyConnect on Windows RT at this time as the OS does not provide APIs to allow us to do so. Good luck with asking your IT firewall guys to create custom methods of access for you. I've never been able to get them to do this at any place I've ever worked. I honestly don't know what MS is thinking behind RT is. Is it for home users/students only?
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The more I use it, the more I think so. It's like they *really* want you to go with the Pro for anything corporate, but you're spending twice the money and getting half the battery life. Last edited by loribinca; at 12:36 PM.
Reason: typo. I feel as a Surface RT user that there are times where I feel this device is too scatter-brained. Sometimes it's just confusing what to make of the tablet. 'It's for productivity!' Awesome, except there is no domain support, limited third party VPN, and no *legal* licensing to use Office for commercial use. Why alienate loyal Microsoft supporters that want to buy and tell the world about how awesome the Surface is? And so people will read the above and say, 'that's what the Pro is for.'
The Pro is as robust as an ultrabook, but with the battery and price it misses the mark as to why the RT is the almost-perfect device to take to meetings. I just don't get it. There is a limbo between the RT and Pro world with very real demand and opportunity and and I hope Microsoft steps up to the challenge and makes it happen. My thoughts exactly.
I'm with Chris Pirillo on this. Instead of mucking about with RT and adding unnecessary confusion they should have just made it run WP8, then for people who wanted to actually do stuff, use the Pro. It is not that big of a deal and if your network security guys won't enable it they are basically showing their ignorance since the IPsec passthrough uses the same authentication methods and is just as secure as LazyConnect. There is nothing 'custom' about it. In fact, LazyConnect is just an Easy Button layer put on top of what should just be a nice simple and seamless IPsec connection.Every firewall guy I've met is so paranoid about getting hacked, it's a wonder they even allow any external access into the network!! So why can i vpn in over cisco anyconnect using my ipad mini seems pretty absurd, that the most non MS Windows/Office centric device has been doing it since day one.