![]() That was annoying trying to troubleshoot that and figure it out. The older clients couldn't take advantage of the new newer Management Station telling them to use it. It was being blocked automatically due to the fact that that was the new policy being enforced that was literally a tick box in the new Management Station that I didn't set. ![]() Everyone in my company that uses Windows Subsystem Linux, which is about 15 or 20 people, that need it on a daily basis, were running the older clients of course, as they were migrated over the new Management Station and they weren't allowed to use that. For example, Windows Service or Windows Subsystem Linux. The newer Management Station has features that it enforced on the clients that the clients weren't able to support. Then we had the new Management Station in the Cloud that Check Point is administering as it is a SaaS, which is a benefit. ![]() There are the clients that are running on the laptops, and there are the Management Stations, and then we had one on-premise, which was older in terms of the clients that we were running. For example, they had some features that were not supported by older clients. There were some caveats that we encountered on the new Management Station. It would be ideal if they had a migration tool of some sort.
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