Microsoft Teams
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I need to come up to speed with Teams.
Can people who don't have an Office 365 tenant, for example, just someone with the Teams app on their laptop, communicate via Teams with others who do have O365 tenants?
Are there other apps that can communicate with users using Teams or must everyone use Teams to be able to communicate with one another?
Thanks for any help.
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Does Guest access provide the Guest with access to files and folders?
What benefits does Guest access provide??
Thanks.
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Read: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoftteams/teams-overview
We just started testing out Teams where I work.. nothing big yet though, just me an my co-worker.
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This is great, we are starting to use Teams here as well. Adding this to my watch threads.
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Looks like for four US dollars a month you can have a Audio Conference account that will let you have up to 250 people call in on a conference number assigned to you. This may cover most of what you need.
There is more to it than that.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoftteams/audio-conferencing-in-office-365
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We too are looking at Teams.
I've setup meetings from a person with O365 and invited free accounts with no issues.
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Teams requires the meeting owner to attend to make make the meeting happen (at least we haven't found a way around this yet). Zoom does not have this requirement.
Said another way - in a Zoom meeting, you have the option "Enable join before host" This allows the meeting to happen with or without the person who scheduled it.This was a problem for us, as we want schedulers to schedule meetings for their bosses (providers) and the schedule not be involved in the meeting at all. Luckily we found that if you have calendar delegation rights to the person who will be in the meeting, though Outlook, you can schedule a Teams meeting on their behalf.
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Teams allows one person to have multiple overlapping meetings, even better, those meetings can happen at the same time. It's a little convoluted to get going because the meeting owner has to start each meeting. Here is how it can be done.
Meeting 1 - host joins meeting, others join meeting, host leaves
Meeting 2 - host joins meeting, others join, host leavesNow the host is free to join either meeting at will. Additionally, more people can come and go from the meeting as desired.
Zoom does not allow this at all. A host can schedule overlapping meetings, but a host is only allowed one meeting to happen at a time. Additionally, a guest to a meeting can minorly hold hostage the host's ability to start another meeting by not leaving the meeting. I say minorly because the host can log into their meeting and kick that guest out of the meeting, then go back and try again to start their next meeting.
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@Dashrender said in Microsoft Teams:
Teams requires the meeting owner to attend to make make the meeting happen (at least we haven't found a way around this yet). Zoom does not have this requirement.
Said another way - in a Zoom meeting, you have the option "Enable join before host" This allows the meeting to happen with or without the person who scheduled it.This was a problem for us, as we want schedulers to schedule meetings for their bosses (providers) and the schedule not be involved in the meeting at all. Luckily we found that if you have calendar delegation rights to the person who will be in the meeting, though Outlook, you can schedule a Teams meeting on their behalf.
False: As long as someone has the auto generated link (generated from within teams calendar or the via the outlook plugin) anyone can start the meeting. I have been using Teams for 2 years now and have never had to have the person that created the meeting actually attend.
Example: A meeting request is sent by me. My co-worker clicks Join Meeting from outlook, teams, or the meeting reminder (if one is setup) the meeting is started. All attendees will get a pop-up (assuming the teams client is running) saying XYZ has started the meeting, do you want to join?
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@david-wiese said in Microsoft Teams:
@Dashrender said in Microsoft Teams:
Teams requires the meeting owner to attend to make make the meeting happen (at least we haven't found a way around this yet). Zoom does not have this requirement.
Said another way - in a Zoom meeting, you have the option "Enable join before host" This allows the meeting to happen with or without the person who scheduled it.This was a problem for us, as we want schedulers to schedule meetings for their bosses (providers) and the schedule not be involved in the meeting at all. Luckily we found that if you have calendar delegation rights to the person who will be in the meeting, though Outlook, you can schedule a Teams meeting on their behalf.
False: As long as someone has the auto generated link (generated from within teams calendar or the via the outlook plugin) anyone can start the meeting. I have been using Teams for 2 years now and have never had to have the person that created the meeting actually attend.
Example: A meeting request is sent by me. My co-worker clicks Join Meeting from outlook, teams, or the meeting reminder (if one is setup) the meeting is started. All attendees will get a pop-up (assuming the teams client is running) saying XYZ has started the meeting, do you want to join?
When a guest joins a meeting I (paying customer) made and invited a non paying customer too, this is what I see when the non paying customer logs in.
I made sure two people were in the meeting just now, and they can't start the meeting without the host. Perhaps I'm missing a checkbox - going back to check that now.
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When making a meeting from Outlook's calendar, this seems like the only option - i.e. enable a Teams based meeting.
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Teams has no more option when making a meeting than Outlook Calendar
@david-wiese I'd appreciate it if you could send a meeting to my co-worker and I, and see if we can join without you. This option might be a setting change in your companies O365 settings.
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I use both Zoom and Teams at work.
Basic overview:
Zoom is reliable and easy to use
Teams is relatively easy to use for video conferencing BUT it's a small part of a larger picture.Zoom doesn't pretend to be anything. It's video conferencing software, and it works really well.
Teams tries to do a lot.
Good:- video conferencing
- team chat, and channels
- file sharing
Bad
- Tries to do too much. Wraps Sharepoint/ODfB, O365 editing tools, Phone calls,
- Unless you apply a registry setting via GPO, it auto starts at login. No GPO setting to STFU
- It's pushed REALLY hard from MS.
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@david-wiese said in Microsoft Teams:
False: As long as someone has the auto generated link (generated from within teams calendar or the via the outlook plugin) anyone can start the meeting. I have been using Teams for 2 years now and have never had to have the person that created the meeting actually attend.
Thanks for this post - my early googles didn't land me on anything, but this morning got lucky.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/change-participant-settings-for-a-teams-meeting-53261366-dbd5-45f9-aae9-a70e6354f88e?ui=en-us&rs=en-us&ad=usThis can be set globally as mentioned in the link, but it can also be set by the host, sadly, not during initial meeting creation, but right afterwords.
From teams:
Open the calendar > open the meeting > click on Meeting Options
This will open a webpage and show this.
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@Dashrender said in Microsoft Teams:
Thanks for this post - my early googles didn't land me on anything, but this morning got lucky.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/change-participant-settings-for-a-teams-meeting-53261366-dbd5-45f9-aae9-a70e6354f88e?ui=en-us&rs=en-us&ad=usA good example of what's wrong with Teams. It's so complicated that even someone like you can't always figure it out. Bob the Sales Manager has no chance.
I've never understood how Microsoft manage to make products so convoluted. Then someone like Zoom comes along and shows how simple things can be.
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@Carnival-Boy said in Microsoft Teams:
A good example of what's wrong with Teams. It's so complicated that even someone like you can't always figure it out. Bob the Sales Manager has no chance.
This this this.
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@Carnival-Boy said in Microsoft Teams:
@Dashrender said in Microsoft Teams:
Thanks for this post - my early googles didn't land me on anything, but this morning got lucky.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/change-participant-settings-for-a-teams-meeting-53261366-dbd5-45f9-aae9-a70e6354f88e?ui=en-us&rs=en-us&ad=usA good example of what's wrong with Teams. It's so complicated that even someone like you can't always figure it out. Bob the Sales Manager has no chance.
I've never understood how Microsoft manage to make products so convoluted. Then someone like Zoom comes along and shows how simple things can be.
No disagreement here - no reason for these settings to be buried - I'm sure their argument is - there's likely no one that will use that option, so why clutter the initial interface.
At least the admin can set the default to auto join the meeting.
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Thanks everyone for the very valuable help.
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Also, be careful
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@nadnerB OMG, is MS Teams like SnapChat?