Hey Corey,
Thanks for the response and no worries on your first answer.
Both responses are very helpful. Not being able to restrict access to settings helps us push a personal device model for the Apple TV. And of course a very restricted conference mode could work if all our Faculty wanted was AirPlay. We can defiantly work with this.
Thanks again for the help. Rory
On Jul 16, 2014, at 23:35, "Corey Carson" < email@hidden> wrote: Rory, I stand corrected. There are ninjas who keep an eye on this list, and knock me around when I miss a detail. I missed!
You can put the Apple TV in Conference Mode, with Restrictions, and then it basically becomes an Airplay Destination only. And you can’t get out of Conference mode without a passcode. So, you can’t lock the settings - but you can make it so the users can't get into it. Basically, it’s an Apple TV that is always in Conference Mode, and the only way to get off that screen is to type in the Restrictions passcode. You can still Airplay to it, but can’t see anything on the Apple TV (when not mirroring), besides the Conference Mode screen.
On Jul 16, 2014, at 9:58 PM, Corey Carson < email@hidden> wrote: Hi Rory,
The existing set of restrictions do not allow you to restrict access to the Settings. You haven’t missed anything :-) :-(
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