fixing appendix a links

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Brian Lich
2016-04-20 11:43:50 -07:00
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## Whitelisting the DeviceID
Your organization may have a global policy that prevents syncing of device accounts provisioned on Surface Hubs. To configure this property, see [Allowing device IDs for ActiveSync](appendix-a--powershell.md#whitelisting-device-ids-cmdlet).
Your organization may have a global policy that prevents syncing of device accounts provisioned on Surface Hubs. To configure this property, see [Allowing device IDs for ActiveSync](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md#whitelisting-device-ids-cmdlet).
## Setting PasswordEnabled
The device account must have an ActiveSync policy where the **PasswordEnabled** attribute is set to False or 0. To configure this property, see [Creating a Surface Hub-compatible Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync policy](appendix-a--powershell.md#create-compatible-as-policy).
The device account must have an ActiveSync policy where the **PasswordEnabled** attribute is set to False or 0. To configure this property, see [Creating a Surface Hub-compatible Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync policy](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md#create-compatible-as-policy).
 

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<td align="left"><p>Allowed device IDs (ActiveSync Device ID)</p></td>
<td align="left"><p>Your Exchange ActiveSync setup may require that an account must whitelist device IDs so that ActiveSync can retrieve the device accounts mail and calendar. You must ensure that the Surface Hubs device ID is added to this whitelist. This can either be configured using PowerShell (by setting the <code>ActiveSyncAllowedDeviceIDs</code> property) or the Exchange administrative portal.</p>
<p>You can find out how to find and whitelist a device ID with PowerShell in [Allowing device IDs for ActiveSync](appendix-a--powershell.md#whitelisting-device-ids-cmdlet).</p></td>
<p>You can find out how to find and whitelist a device ID with PowerShell in [Allowing device IDs for ActiveSync](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md#whitelisting-device-ids-cmdlet).</p></td>
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@ -153,7 +153,7 @@ These sections describe resources used by the Surface Hub device account.
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<td align="left"><p>[Hybrid deployment](hybrid-deployment-surface-hub-device-accounts.md)</p></td>
<td align="left"><p>A hybrid deployment requires special processing in order to set up a device account for your Surface Hub. If youre using a hybrid deployment, in which your organization has a mix of services, with some hosted on-premises and some hosted online, then your configuration will depend on where each service is hosted. This topic covers hybrid deployments for [Exchange hosted on-prem](#hybrid-exchange-on-prem), and [Exchange hosted online](#hybrid-exchange-online). Because there are so many different variations in this type of deployment, it's not possible to provide detailed instructions for all of them. The following process will work for many configurations. If the process isn't right for your setup, we recommend that you use PowerShell (see [Appendix: PowerShell](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md)) to achieve the same end result as documented here, and for other deployment options. You should then use the provided PowerShell script to verify your Surface Hub setup. (See [Account Verification Script](appendix-a--powershell.md#acct-verification-ps-scripts).)</p></td>
<td align="left"><p>A hybrid deployment requires special processing in order to set up a device account for your Surface Hub. If youre using a hybrid deployment, in which your organization has a mix of services, with some hosted on-premises and some hosted online, then your configuration will depend on where each service is hosted. This topic covers hybrid deployments for [Exchange hosted on-prem](#hybrid-exchange-on-prem), and [Exchange hosted online](#hybrid-exchange-online). Because there are so many different variations in this type of deployment, it's not possible to provide detailed instructions for all of them. The following process will work for many configurations. If the process isn't right for your setup, we recommend that you use PowerShell (see [Appendix: PowerShell](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md)) to achieve the same end result as documented here, and for other deployment options. You should then use the provided PowerShell script to verify your Surface Hub setup. (See [Account Verification Script](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md#acct-verification-ps-scripts).)</p></td>
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<td align="left"><p>[Create a device account using UI](create-a-device-account-using-office-365.md)</p></td>

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@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ author: TrudyHa
# Hybrid deployment (Surface Hub)
A hybrid deployment requires special processing in order to set up a device account for your Microsoft Surface Hub. If youre using a hybrid deployment, in which your organization has a mix of services, with some hosted on-premises and some hosted online, then your configuration will depend on where each service is hosted. This topic covers hybrid deployments for [Exchange hosted on-prem](#hybrid-exchange-on-prem), and [Exchange hosted online](#hybrid-exchange-online). Because there are so many different variations in this type of deployment, it's not possible to provide detailed instructions for all of them. The following process will work for many configurations. If the process isn't right for your setup, we recommend that you use PowerShell (see [Appendix: PowerShell](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md)) to achieve the same end result as documented here, and for other deployment options. You should then use the provided PowerShell script to verify your Surface Hub setup. (See [Account Verification Script](appendix-a--powershell.md#acct-verification-ps-scripts).)
A hybrid deployment requires special processing in order to set up a device account for your Microsoft Surface Hub. If youre using a hybrid deployment, in which your organization has a mix of services, with some hosted on-premises and some hosted online, then your configuration will depend on where each service is hosted. This topic covers hybrid deployments for [Exchange hosted on-prem](#hybrid-exchange-on-prem), and [Exchange hosted online](#hybrid-exchange-online). Because there are so many different variations in this type of deployment, it's not possible to provide detailed instructions for all of them. The following process will work for many configurations. If the process isn't right for your setup, we recommend that you use PowerShell (see [Appendix: PowerShell](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md)) to achieve the same end result as documented here, and for other deployment options. You should then use the provided PowerShell script to verify your Surface Hub setup. (See [Account Verification Script](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md#acct-verification-ps-scripts).)
## <a href="" id="hybrid-exchange-on-prem"></a>Exchange on-prem

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This topic explains how you add a device account for your Microsoft Surface Hub when you have a single-forest, on-premises deployment.
If you have a single-forest on-premises deployment with Microsoft Exchange 2013 or later and Skype for Business 2013 or later, then you can [use the provided PowerShell scripts](appendix-a--powershell.md#create-on-premise-ps-scripts) to create device accounts. If youre using a multi-forest deployment, or are using Exchange 2010 or Lync 2010, you can use equivalent cmdlets that will produce the same results. Those cmdlets are described in this section.
If you have a single-forest on-premises deployment with Microsoft Exchange 2013 or later and Skype for Business 2013 or later, then you can [use the provided PowerShell scripts](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md#create-on-premise-ps-scripts) to create device accounts. If youre using a multi-forest deployment, or are using Exchange 2010 or Lync 2010, you can use equivalent cmdlets that will produce the same results. Those cmdlets are described in this section.
1. Start a remote PowerShell session from a PC and connect to Exchange.

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@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ author: TrudyHa
This topic has instructions for adding a device account for your Microsoft Surface Hub when you have a pure, online deployment.
If you have a pure, online (O365) deployment, then you can [use the provided PowerShell scripts](appendix-a--powershell.md#create-os356-ps-scripts) to create device accounts. If youre using Microsoft Exchange 2010 or Lync 2010, you can use equivalent cmdlets that will produce the same results. Those cmdlets are described in this section.
If you have a pure, online (O365) deployment, then you can [use the provided PowerShell scripts](appendix-a-powershell-scripts-for-surface-hub.md#create-os356-ps-scripts) to create device accounts. If youre using Microsoft Exchange 2010 or Lync 2010, you can use equivalent cmdlets that will produce the same results. Those cmdlets are described in this section.
1. Start a remote PowerShell session on a PC and connect to Exchange.