OneDrive for Business on Office 365 Never Enables
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I'm over a month now without a working Office 365 account. Can't share documents or anything - everything is broken. I can see Sharepoint but little else.
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I ran into this issue today. Ever since they tried to make it "more user friendly" it has stopped working, I guess?
I was trying to show someone how to sync their OneDrive for Business folder and it just stayed at that screen indefinitely. I ended up having to use the online version of OneDrive instead of actually syncing it...
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Online version? What is this if not that? I can't even start to use it as the account doesn't appear to "exist" in ODfB terms, right?
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What do you mean Microsoft lost your old account? That's sounds extremely serious. I'm sure that there will be companies that rely on ODfB so much that if Microsoft lost their files the company would go bust.
Have your recent experiences made you reconsider your recommendations for people to use O365 at all? It has made me nervous about switching to it. I'd love to hear more details about what exactly happened to your account.
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I have to ask are you still able to sign into your office 365 account at all? Are you the account administrator or is @Minion-Queen?
The two are independent features, and I can enable or disable them for my users at a whim.
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One Drive for business is the lunatic uncle of the 365 family, I love 365 but if anyone is ever looking at it for file storage, for now the answer is stay away.
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ODfB is Sharepoint isn't it? That is a shame. It is one of things that attracted us to O365. So do you recommend on-premise Sharepoint instead? That adds a significant cost to IT budgets, as Sharepoint isn't cheap unless you can get away with the free version, especially with SQL Server licences on top.
Edit: it's based on Sharepoint but isn't the same as Sharepoint Online, is that right? So is Sharepoint Online good, whilst ODfB is bad? What's the difference? Is ODfB really just a syncing tool?
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@Carnival-Boy said:
ODfB is Sharepoint isn't it? That is a shame. It is one of things that attracted us to O365. So do you recommend on-premise Sharepoint instead? That adds a significant cost to IT budgets, as Sharepoint isn't cheap unless you can get away with the free version, especially with SQL Server licences on top.
Edit: it's based on Sharepoint but isn't the same as Sharepoint Online, is that right? So is Sharepoint Online good, whilst ODfB is bad? What's the difference? Is ODfB really just a syncing tool?
I am by no means fully aware of all the aspects of ODfB, SharePoint or All things O365, but ODfB is as I understand it, the same as saying BOX.net, Dropbox or Google Drive. It is a cloud storage media.
The 'up side' of ODfB or OD in general is that it interfaces 'seamlessly' with all the other components.
However, I could be misinterpreting the engine.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
What do you mean Microsoft lost your old account? That's sounds extremely serious. I'm sure that there will be companies that rely on ODfB so much that if Microsoft lost their files the company would go bust.
Have your recent experiences made you reconsider your recommendations for people to use O365 at all? It has made me nervous about switching to it. I'd love to hear more details about what exactly happened to your account.
I'm definitely questioning Microsoft's abilities to support their products. We've had massive issues with O365 as well as Azure. Microsoft dismisses huge outages and dataloss as "account issues" as if why their backend technology fails changes the fact that their product and support is unstable.
We've been having issues for over a month and not only is Microsoft unable to fix anything, they've essentially just abandoned us and stopped providing support.
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@DustinB3403 said:
I have to ask are you still able to sign into your office 365 account at all? Are you the account administrator or is @Minion-Queen?
The two are independent features, and I can enable or disable them for my users at a whim.
I can sign into AN account. It is not the same as my previous account and it does not fully work. And it does not contain by data.
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@gjacobse said:
The 'up side' of ODfB or OD in general is that it interfaces 'seamlessly' with all the other components.
However, I could be misinterpreting the engine.
When it worked, ODfB was great. If MS has an "account" issue with you, it doesn't. I can access my Sharepoint via my account, but not ODfB.
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Can you sign into https://login.microsoftonline.com/ with your 365 account?
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@DustinB3403 said:
Can you sign into https://login.microsoftonline.com/ with your 365 account?
You mean the NEW account that isn't the useful one that we've established I'm logged into since I get the message that it isn't setting up ODfB and doesn't have my data?
Or the old one that doesn't exist?
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The site supports two different login's one for a business account and the other for a private account.
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Here is what Delve shows. Clearly things are not working.
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@DustinB3403 said:
The site supports two different login's one for a business account and the other for a private account.
I don't have either.
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Newsfeed is not working...
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@Carnival-Boy said:
What do you mean Microsoft lost your old account? That's sounds extremely serious.
There was a billing issue (right or wrong is not my place to know) and the account was terminated.
There was never an outage of Azure services no matter how Scott wants to phrase is to push blame.
Were services that Scott was offering/using down because of said account terminating? Yes.
Was there a failure? Yes, but it wasn't Azure or OBfB or Exchange Online or any other component. It was an account level failure.
Was it Scott or Microsoft? Dunno. -
I have to ask, as I've seen it happen a few times.
Open an incognito tab if your using Chrome and attempt to sign in using your business account.
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@JaredBusch said:
There was never an outage of Azure services no matter how Scott wants to phrase is to push blame.
Were services that Scott was offering/using down because of said account terminating? Yes.There wasn't a billing issue, there was a backend technical issue that caused an account to be lost.
So services were down but that's not an outage? I don't see how it can be one or the other. Azure was unable to deliver services, that's an outage. That it was triggered by a technical glitch on their account system rather than in the hypervisor isn't relevant and is misdirection. The platform itself failed (isolated to one account family) and was technically unable to host VMs and had an outage.
Even after the issue was identified to be an account-related one, MS was unable for many hours to even begin to figure out how to spin up VMs to recover from the outage. It was an outage, plain and simple. It was a technical failing of the Azure systems and a fragility that was built into the system and a lack of clear support issues was the cause of the ongoing outage.
The outage was not isolated to OUR account, but happened in a rolling manner to many other accounts, including to others in this forum.
How do YOU define outage if it isn't that the ability to deliver your product to your customers? Redefining it as only certain types of technical failures and not others seems misleading. It's not my place to care why Azure failed, that's MS' problem. It failed and require a lot of escalation, a lot of pressure and many engineers and managers to restore it within half a day.