HOTSPOT - For each of the following statements, select Yes if the statement is true. Otherwise, select No. NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point. Hot Area:
Suggested Answer:
Box 1: No - You can assign service administrators and co-administrators in the Azure Portal but there can only be one account administrator.
Box 2: No - You need an Azure Active Directory account to manage a subscription, not a Microsoft account. An account is created in the Azure Active Directory when you create the subscription. Further accounts can be created in the Azure Active Directory to manage the subscription.
Box 3: No - Resource groups are logical containers for Azure resources. However, resource groups do not contain subscriptions. Subscriptions contain resource groups. Reference: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/office365/enterprise/subscriptions-licenses-accounts-and-tenants-for-microsoft-cloud-offerings
You can only have one account administrator per subscription:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/role-based-access-control/rbac-and-directory-admin-roles
This is correct as the article says and I confirmed in my subscription..
Classic subscription administrator Limit -
Account Administrator 1 per Azure account
Exactly, Account Administrator: 1 per Azure account => an account may have a number of subscriptions but still have 1 Account administrator
Link: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/role-based-access-control/rbac-and-directory-admin-roles
The link says the opposite "In the Azure portal, you can manage Co-Administrators or view the Service Administrator by using the Classic administrators tab." there are three types of administrators.
"The account that is used to sign up for Azure is automatically set as both the Account Administrator and Service Administrator. Then, additional Co-Administrators can be added. "
Source https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/role-based-access-control/rbac-and-directory-admin-roles
NNN is just fine;
isnt it; No: Each Azure subscription has one account administrator, but it can have multiple service administrators and co-administrators?
Copilot
Antwoorden voor u genereren…
Verzonden door Copilot:
You’re correct! Let’s clarify:
Account Administrator: Each Azure subscription has one Account Administrator who has full access to the subscription and can manage all resources.
Service Administrators and Co-Administrators: An Azure subscription can have multiple Service Administrators and Co-Administrators who also have significant management capabilities within the subscription.
So, the statement “Each Azure subscription can contain multiple account administrators” should indeed be No. Instead, it can have multiple Service Administrators and Co-Administrators.
Thank you for pointing that out! If you have any more questions or need further clarification, feel free to ask!
1. yes - each Azure subscription can have multiple account administrators.
2. No - we can create using a Microsoft account, but we can use AD.
3. No - think of Azure resource group as a room and Azure subscription as a house. we have many rooms inside a house but we cannot have a house inside the room.
Ans from Copilot - Yes, each Azure subscription can indeed contain multiple account administrators. These administrators have permissions to manage resources within the subscription.
Ans from Copilot - The answer is No for the statement “Each Azure subscription can contain multiple account administrators.” There can only be one Account Administrator per Azure subscription, who is responsible for billing and subscription management. However, you can assign multiple users with administrative roles within the subscription to manage resources, but these roles are different from the Account Administrator role. (maybe AI have gone mad)
NNN is correct.
1. No: Each Azure subscription has one account administrator, but it can have multiple service administrators and co-administrators.
2. No: An Azure subscription can be managed using both a Microsoft account and an organizational account (Azure Active Directory account).
3. No: An Azure resource group is a container that holds related resources for an Azure solution. It does not contain multiple Azure subscriptions; rather, it organizes resources within a single subscription.
Do I need a Microsoft account to sign up for Azure?
You can sign up with either a Microsoft account or a GitHub account.
https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/free/free-account-faq#:~:text=Do%20I%20need%20a%20Microsoft,account%20or%20a%20GitHub%20account.
N - https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/role-based-access-control/rbac-and-directory-admin-roles#classic-subscription-administrator-roles
N - You can sign up with either a Microsoft account or a GitHub account.
https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/free/free-account-faq#:~:text=Do%20I%20need%20a%20Microsoft,account%20or%20a%20GitHub%20account.
N
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