Solved Need to setup O365 shared calendar
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Your required to have tenant administrative access for this. I assume you're aware of this already but just confirming.
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@Obsolesce not what is needed is others have to edit the events. That is why I asked about shared calendar setup.
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@Obsolesce said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
https://www.boostitco.com/how-to-create-a-shared-calendar-in-outlook-office-365/
That is exactly the kind of clear guide I was hoping to fine. Thank you
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This is crazy, I am working on something similar.
@Obsolesce said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
https://www.boostitco.com/how-to-create-a-shared-calendar-in-outlook-office-365/
This is almost exactly what I was looking for but want it to be able to share out a calendar from Microsoft Teams.
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So from the admin account, I created and shared a calendar as a test if this is what they actually want.
But I am curious what the best permission is.
O365 does not seem real clear on that.
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If it's a fully shared (controlled by all) calendar, I would choose Can edit.
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@Dashrender said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
If it's a fully shared (controlled by all) calendar, I would choose Can edit.
That does not answer the question
It is a normal user, the admin account. That went to their calendar and clicked new calendar. They then shared it as shown.
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@JaredBusch said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
@Dashrender said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
If it's a fully shared (controlled by all) calendar, I would choose Can edit.
That does not answer the question
It is a normal user, the admin account. That went to their calendar and clicked new calendar. They then shared it as shown.
Then I don't understand the question - I said - choose "Can edit" that's one of the choices you showed as an option.
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@Dashrender said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
@JaredBusch said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
@Dashrender said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
If it's a fully shared (controlled by all) calendar, I would choose Can edit.
That does not answer the question
It is a normal user, the admin account. That went to their calendar and clicked new calendar. They then shared it as shown.
Then I don't understand the question - I said - choose "Can edit" that's one of the choices you showed as an option.
WTF does "Can Edit" mean? Is it actually the most open access? I have no idea.
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@JaredBusch said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
@Dashrender said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
@JaredBusch said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
@Dashrender said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
If it's a fully shared (controlled by all) calendar, I would choose Can edit.
That does not answer the question
It is a normal user, the admin account. That went to their calendar and clicked new calendar. They then shared it as shown.
Then I don't understand the question - I said - choose "Can edit" that's one of the choices you showed as an option.
WTF does "Can Edit" mean? Is it actually the most open access? I have no idea.
Aww - now I undertand - yes, it's basically W/R access for whomever you grant it to.
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@JaredBusch said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
@Dashrender said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
@JaredBusch said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
@Dashrender said in Need to setup O365 shared calendar:
If it's a fully shared (controlled by all) calendar, I would choose Can edit.
That does not answer the question
It is a normal user, the admin account. That went to their calendar and clicked new calendar. They then shared it as shown.
Then I don't understand the question - I said - choose "Can edit" that's one of the choices you showed as an option.
WTF does "Can Edit" mean? Is it actually the most open access? I have no idea.
It's all hidden from the GUI now as far as I know but higher access levels still exist. The only thing I've actually run into people trying to use that requires it is messing with categories.
You have to be a Publishing Editor or Owner to work with them.
I usually end up assigning those for users using PowerShell when the need arises.
get/set/add-mailboxfolderpermission