Sir all I'm asking is why??? your explanation are great, simple to understand and always on point. also these are not boring. So why this channel does not have so much subs???
Thanks for your kind words. While I am trying to give back to the community, the truth is that I do these videos as much for myself as I do for others. I’ve always heard that when you learn something new, you should teach it right away to someone else. I hope that my presentation style resonates with at least some people, and they get some value out of it. If nothing else, I’ve practiced speaking on these topics and helped myself out.
It's always Policies at the top, and then Standards. Feeding off the standards would then be the Procedures, Guidelines, and Baselines. At that third level of the hierarchy I would say Procedure should be ahead of Guidelines, but Baselines would on its own branch. The important things to know for any course or exam is that Policies are the high level principles and Standards get more specific on the details, Procedures are step by step technical instructions, and Guidelines are basically "good advice".
Much more clear than other videos I've watched on this topic.. thank you
I can't believe more people aren't following this guy..
well said, Thank you
very well explained...thank you!!
very clear with best explanation.
very clear, and helpful, thank you.
Great explanation
Sir all I'm asking is why??? your explanation are great, simple to understand and always on point. also these are not boring. So why this channel does not have so much subs???
Thanks for your kind words. While I am trying to give back to the community, the truth is that I do these videos as much for myself as I do for others. I’ve always heard that when you learn something new, you should teach it right away to someone else. I hope that my presentation style resonates with at least some people, and they get some value out of it. If nothing else, I’ve practiced speaking on these topics and helped myself out.
@@phil.anderson thanks sir, thanks a lot
Cheers Phil
3:05 from standard, next step is procedures, i.e How to set at NT domain that request user to change the password every 48 days
the baseline is minimum configuration / settings, correct?
It's always Policies at the top, and then Standards. Feeding off the standards would then be the Procedures, Guidelines, and Baselines. At that third level of the hierarchy I would say Procedure should be ahead of Guidelines, but Baselines would on its own branch. The important things to know for any course or exam is that Policies are the high level principles and Standards get more specific on the details, Procedures are step by step technical instructions, and Guidelines are basically "good advice".
@@super-kernelsuper1413 You bet! Baselines are the application of a standard to provide uniformity and consistency.