![]() It is not uncommon for your particular issue to be worked into a new update once identified fairly quickly, and if there isn't a release soon they do have beta offerings. The support staff works through issues we have and works closely with developers. There will always be the occasional quirk, and there are definately some bugs in certain packages, however with powershell there is a variety of ways things can be re-tried. There are growing pains with the product as they support new interfaces being developed, support has never let me down however. Yes, sometimes silent installs will suppress these, sometimes applications aren't written that well however and chocolatey covers you in that case. While your applications need to be packaged well, and not say leaving a prompt hanging out there waiting for input, any windows/etc that could mess with install are hidden. This service will essentially hide everything from the user. I dont know anything about the free version, but the enterprise version includes a background service. ![]() There is a free version, and a paid-for Enterprise version. I've never had a problem with support breaking down the concepts for me when I don't understand them. It can be difficult to understand some of the documentation as it is very technical. The support staff are top-notch and really know what they are doing. The developers have/are introducing a reporting and central control console, but it's in beta/early intro and while our company will pick it up eventually, we use pdq inventory for the moment for reporting details. We use chocolatey for mass deployment and version control in my company. It has a stdlib which has it's own functions, or you can write your own - which my org has. One of the better things it offers is powershell scripting, you can follow the chocolatey rules, or just use it to deploy a powershell script when needed. It provides a well developed GUI interface for users and a solid cmd line for more technical users. ![]() Chocolatey offers version control for our env as well as a simplification of deploying software to non-admin users. ![]()
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