What should you do?

You have a computer named Computer1 that runs Windows 10 Enterprise. Computer1 is a member of an Active Directory domain named contoso.com.

You have a line-of-business universal app named App1. App1 is developed internally.

You need to ensure that you can run App1 on Computer1. The solution must meet the following requirements:

Minimize costs to deploy the app.

Minimize the attack surface on Computer1.

What should you do?
A . Have App1 certified by the Windows Store.
B . Sign App1 with a certificate issued by a third-party certificate authority.
C . From the Update & Security setting on Computer1, enable the Sideload apps setting.
D . Run the AddCAppxProvisionedPackage cmdlet.

Answer: C

Explanation:

To install the application, you need to ‘Sideload’ it. First you need to enable the Sideload apps setting.

LOBW indows Store apps that are not signed by the Windows Store can be sideloaded or added to a PC in the enterprise through scripts at runtime on a per-user basis. They can also be provisioned in an image by the enterprise so that the app is registered to each new user profile that’s created on the PC. The requirements to sideload the app per-user or in the image are the same, but the Windows PowerShell cmdlets you use to add, get, and remove the apps are different.

Before you can sideload LOB Windows Store apps that are not signed by the Windows Store, you will need to configure the PC.

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