The Session tab is an important one, as it has a significant impact on the server's security and performance. The most visible piece is the Default Session Settings, on the right. These have a very noticeable impact on your users' experience with the portal, and you would probably want to tinker with them a bit.
Before going into detail, let's understand the difference between a regular session and a Privileged session. The idea with these two is that you might want to make the lives of some users easier, for example by letting their sessions be inactive for a longer duration, if they meet certain requirements. If you recall, we discussed this briefly in Chapter 8, where we saw how you can configure a trunk with a Privileged Endpoint policy. That policy would be typically different (usually stricter) than the regular access policy. For example, the regular policy could allow any endpoint in, but the privileged endpoint policy could check if the computer is a corporate machine...