![]() ![]() If you have access to a Windows machine or VM in your org, you can stop reading here! ![]() Windows has a straightforward way to stay logged in as one user/domain while presenting different credentials depending on the service you’re connecting to: Credentials Manager. As orgs get better at integrating and sharing resources between teams, we increasingly have scenarios where you can’t just log out & in with another ID – rather you need to simultaneously connect to services in different domains, e.g. Why?Ī large organisation using Active Directory often uses a separate domain for each division of their organisation, and likely also separate domains for development and production resources & environments. I’ll describe a workaround for one such issue here. As Mac adoption increases, and with new developers starting their first job on Macs, some very niche issues – the sort that would affect less than 0.01% of the workforce, who were probably expert enough to deal with it – have become common problems affecting entire teams. Nowadays, MacBooks are becoming increasingly common in large orgs as an option for all staff. In the old days, the only place you’d find a Mac in a large organisation was in the design team – they’d be self-supported and incompatibility issues with the rest of the Windows org would be an unavoidable fact of life.
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