Aug 06, 2019 Edge gets DOM 3D viewer on Dev and Canary channels. Developers can now see 3D renders of websites thanks to a new feature on the Canary and Dev versions of Microsoft Edge. Rhino 6 for Mac - Latest Version - Requires a license key. Work-In-Progress (WIP) Serengeti build - the latest Work-In-Progress (Requires a Rhino 6 license key) For iOS. IRhino 3D viewer for native Rhino 3DM files on iOS devices. Brazil - advanced rendering for Rhino; Penguin. Sep 20, 2013 VSD Viewer is a free-to-try Microsoft Visio Viewer for Mac. It supports VSD, VDX, VSDX and displays Shape Data and Layers and allows you to convert Visio to PDF. This Visio Reader provides a rich set of viewer options for opening, complex rendering and exact displaying Visio drawings on macOS.
-->Applies to: Azure Information Protection, Office 365
Use the following information to identify the applications and solutions that natively support the Azure Rights Management service (Azure RMS), which provides the data protection for Azure Information Protection.
For these applications and solutions, Rights Management support is tightly integrated by using the Rights Management APIs to support usage restrictions. These applications and solutions are also known as 'RMS-enlightened.'
Unless stated otherwise, the supported capabilities apply to both Azure RMS and AD RMS. In addition, AD RMS support on iOS, Android, macOS, and Windows Phone 8.1 requires Active Directory Rights Management Services Mobile Device Extension.
RMS-enlightened applications
The following table displays RMS-enlightened client applications from Microsoft and software vendors.
For information about viewing protected PDF documents, see Protected PDF readers for Microsoft Information Protection.
Information about the table columns:
- Email: The email clients that are listed can protect the email message itself, which automatically protects any attached Office files that are not already protected. In this scenario, the client’s preview feature can display the protected content (message and attachment) to authorized recipients. However, if an email message itself is not protected but the attachment is protected, the client’s preview feature cannot display the protected attachment to authorized recipients.Tip: For email clients that don't support protecting emails, consider using Exchange Online mail flow rules to apply this protection.
- Other file types: Text and image files include files that have a file name extension such as .txt, .xml, .jpg, and .jpeg. These files change their file name extension after they are natively protected by Rights Management, and become read-only. Files that cannot be natively protected have a .pfile file name extension after they are generically protected by Rights Management. For more information, see the File types supported from the Azure Information Protection client admin guide.
Device operating system | Word, Excel, PowerPoint | Other file types | |
---|---|---|---|
Windows | Office 365 apps [1] Office 2010 Office 2013 Office 2016 Office 2019 Office for the web (viewing protected documents) [2] Web browser [3] | Outlook 2010 Outlook 2013 Outlook 2016 Outlook 2019 Outlook from Office 365 ProPlus Web browser [4] Windows Mail [5] | Visio from Office 365 apps, Office 2019, and Office 2016: .vsdm, .vsdx, .vssm, .vstm, .vssx, .vstx Azure Information Protection client for Windows: Text, images, pfile SealPath RMS plugin for AutoCAD: .dwg |
iOS | GigaTrust Office Mobile Office for the web [2] TITUS Docs Web browser [3] | Azure Information Protection app (viewing protected email) BlackBerry Work Citrix WorxMail NitroDesk [5] Outlook for iPad and iPhone [5] TITUS Mail Web browser [4] | Azure Information Protection app (viewing protecting text and images) TITUS Docs: Pfile |
Android | GigaTrust App for Android Office for the web [2] Office Mobile (unless using sensitivity labels, limited to viewing and editing protected documents) Web browser [3] | 9Folders [5] Azure Information Protection app (viewing protected emails) BlackBerry Work GigaTrust App for Android [5] Citrix WorxMail NitroDesk [5] Outlook for Android [5] Samsung Email (S3 and later) [5] TITUS Classification for Mobile Web browser [4] | Azure Information Protection app (viewing protected text and images) |
macOS | Office 365 apps Office 2019 for Mac Office 2016 for Mac Office for the web [2] Web browser [3] | Outlook 2019 for Mac Outlook 2016 for Mac Web browser [4] | RMS sharing app (viewing protected text, images, generically protected files) |
Windows 10 Mobile | Office Mobile apps (viewing protected documents using Azure RMS) Web browser [3] | Citrix WorxMail Outlook Mail (viewing protected emails) Web browser [4] | Not supported |
Blackberry 10 | Web browser [3] | Blackberry email [5] Web browser [4] | Not supported |
Footnote 1
Includes:
- Office apps minimum version 1805, build 9330.2078 from Office 365 Business or Microsoft 365 Business when the user is assigned a license for Azure Rights Management (also known as Azure Information Protection for Office 365)
- Office 365 ProPlus apps
Footnote 2
Supported only with SharePoint Online and OneDrive for Business, and the documents are unprotected before they are uploaded to a protected library.
Footnote 3
For Office attachments that are protected by using Office 365 Message Encryption with the new capabilities.
Footnote 4
If the sender and the recipient are part of the same organization. Or either of the following conditions:
- The sender or the recipient are using Exchange Online.
- The sender is using Exchange on-premises in a hybrid configuration.
Footnote 5
Uses Exchange ActiveSync IRM, which must be enabled by the Exchange administrator. Users can view, reply, and reply all for protected email messages but users cannot protect new email messages.
If the email application cannot render the message because the Exchange ActiveSync IRM is not enabled, the recipient can view the email in a web browser when the sender uses Exchange Online, or Exchange on-premises in a hybrid configuration.
More information about Azure RMS support for Office
Azure RMS is tightly integrated into the Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook apps, where this functionality is often referred to as Information Rights Management (IRM).
See also: Office Applications Service Description
Windows computers for Information Rights Management (IRM)
The following Office client suites support protecting files and emails on Windows computers by using the Azure Rights Management service:
- Office apps minimum version 1805, build 9330.2078 from Office 365 Business or Microsoft 365 Business when the user is assigned a license for Azure Rights Management (also known as Azure Information Protection for Office 365)
- Office 365 ProPlusThese editions of Office are included with most but not all Office 365 subscriptions that include data protection from Azure Information Protection. Check your subscription information to see if Office 365 ProPlus is included. You'll also find this information in the Azure Information Protection datasheet.
- Office Professional Plus 2019
- Office Professional Plus 2016
- Office Professional Plus 2013
- Office Professional Plus 2010 with Service Pack 2
All editions of Office (with the exception of Office 2007) support consuming protected content.
When you use the Azure Rights Management service with Office Professional Plus 2010 and Service Pack 2 or Office Professional 2010 with Service Pack 2:
- Requires the Azure Information Protection client for Windows.
- Not supported on Windows 10.
- Does not support forms-based authentication for federated user accounts. These accounts must use Windows Integrated Authentication.
- Does not support overriding template protection with custom permissions that a user selects with the Azure Information Protection client. In this scenario, the original protection must first be removed before custom permissions can be applied.
Mac computers for Information Rights Management (IRM)
The following Office client suites support protecting files and emails on macOS by using Azure RMS:
- Office 365 ProPlus
- Office Standard 2019 for Mac
- Office Standard 2016 for Mac
All editions of Office for Mac 2019 and Office for Mac 2016 support consuming protected content.
Tip: To get started with protecting documents by using Office for Mac, you might find the following FAQ useful: How do I configure a Mac computer to protect and track documents?
More information about the Azure Information Protection app for iOS and Android
The Azure Information Protection app for iOS and Android provides a viewer for rights-protected email messages (.rpmsg files) when these mobile devices don't have an email app that can open protected emails. This app can also open rights-protected PDF files, and pictures and text files that are rights-protected.
If your iOS and Android devices are enrolled by Microsoft Intune, users can install the app from the Company Portal and you can manage the app by using Intune's app protection policies.
For more information about how to use app, see the FAQ for Microsoft Azure Information Protection app for iOS and Android.
More information about the Azure Information Protection client for Windows
For more information, see the following resources:
- Azure Information Protection client administrator guides:
- Azure Information Protection client user guides:
Download the relevant app by using the links on the Microsoft Azure Information Protection page.
More information about the Rights Management sharing app
For Mac computers, the Rights Management sharing app offers a viewer for protected PDF files (.ppdf), protected text images, and generically protected files. It can also protect image files, but not other files. To protect Office files on these computers, use Office for Mac or Office 365 ProPlus.
For more information, see the following resources:
Download the Rights Management sharing app for Mac computers by using the link on the Microsoft Azure Information Protection page.
More information about other applications that support Azure Information Protection
In addition to the applications in the table, any application that supports the APIs for the Azure Rights Management service can be integrated with Azure Information Protection, which includes:
- Line-of-business applications that are written in-house by using the RMS SDKs
- Applications from software vendors that are written by using the RMS SDKs.
For more information, see the Azure Information Protection Developer's Guide.
Applications that are not supported by Azure RMS
The following applications that are not currently supported by Azure RMS include the following:
- Microsoft OneDrive for Business for SharePoint Server 2013
- XPS Viewer
In addition, the Azure Information Protection client has the following restrictions:
- For Windows computers: Requires a minimum version of Windows 7 Service Pack 1
RMS-enlightened solutions
For the latest information about solutions that support the Azure Rights Management service and Azure Information Protection, see the blog post, Microsoft Ignite 2019 – Microsoft Information Protection solutions Partner ecosystem showcase.
Next steps
To check for other requirements, see Requirements for Azure Information Protection.
For more information about how the most commonly used applications support the Azure Rights Management service, see How applications support the Azure Rights Management service.
For information about how to configure the most commonly used applications for the Azure Rights Management service, see Configuring applications for Azure Rights Management.
What you need to know
- Microsoft Edge has a DOM 3D feature to try out.
- The feature allows developers to see a 3D render of websites.
- The feature is inspired by Firefox Tilt.
Developers can now see 3D renders of websites thanks to a new feature on the Canary and Dev versions of Microsoft Edge (via OnMSFT). The DOM 3D view renders a website in 3D, which allows developers to identify certain bugs. The render also shows how a website is layered.
The Microsoft Edge Dev Tools Twitter account shared the feature and showed it off with a short GIF.
Inspired by @FirefoxDevTools' Tilt feature, we just released the DOM 3D viewer in Edge Dev/Canary builds 😀
1) Enable Developer Tools experiments in about://flags
2) Ctrl+Shift+P > 'Experiments' > 'Enable DOM 3D view'
3) Ctrl+Shift+P > 'DOM 3D View'
Let us know what you think! pic.twitter.com/clS8IXHqCt
— Microsoft Edge DevTools (@EdgeDevTools) August 5, 20191) Enable Developer Tools experiments in about://flags
2) Ctrl+Shift+P > 'Experiments' > 'Enable DOM 3D view'
3) Ctrl+Shift+P > 'DOM 3D View'
Let us know what you think! pic.twitter.com/clS8IXHqCt
The feature requires users to both enable developer mode and to turn on the DOM 3D view specifically.
This feature is experimental, so there's always a chance that it could be removed or that it won't work well. For now, though, developers have an additional tool to analyze webpages.
Portable (and affordable) power accessories we love
Each and every one of these charging gadgets will keep your favorite gear and gadgets going for longer, and none of them costs more than $30.
VisionTek 8,000 mAh micro-USB power bank($13 at Dell)
This compact dual-output powerbank can speedily recharge any and all your devices, thanks to a two-amp 'fast charge feature,' using its micro-USB out port. Its simple design includes an LED indicator, and it costs about as much as a single ticket to the movies.
Panasonic eneloop AA batteries(From $13 at Dell)
Panasonic's rechargeable batteries are among the best available, and just a couple of them will keep your favorite remote, mice or other peripherals powered up when you need them. They're also eco. And the company's affordable charger fits and charges both AA and AAA batteries at the same time.
Belkin Qi Wireless Charging Pad($30 at Dell)
This unobtrusive Qi wireless charging pad looks good (and kind of like a UFO …) and easily charges all your Qi-compatible device up to 5W. Its LED indicator lights up when you're charging. And it costs just $30.
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Microsoft 3d Viewer For Mac Pro
UH OHMicrosoft may have delayed Windows 10X and Surface Neo beyond 2020
Microsoft's upcoming Windows 10X and Surface Neo products may not be shipping in time for the holiday after all, according to a new report from ZDNet's Mary-Jo Foley. This means that other Windows 10X devices from third-party manufactures also won't be launching at the end of this year like originally planned. Microsoft's dual-screen Windows 10X effort has been put on pause.