Tag Archives: Office 365

Microsoft Teams Update announcement – February 14, 2017

 

Microsoft Teams has been in preview for several months. We hope that you had the opportunity to evaluate it for your organization. As we communicated in December, in MC89318, Microsoft Teams is currently off by default at the tenant level. Later this quarter, Microsoft will begin enabling Microsoft Teams to be on by default at the tenant level, for all eligible users with the appropriate license assignment. IT admins can continue to manage user access to Microsoft Teams via license assignments. This message is associated with Office 365 Roadmap ID 61652.

How does this affect me?

When we make this change, the ‘Turn Microsoft Teams on or off for your entire organization’ setting in ‘Settings > Services and Add-ins > Microsoft Teams’, will go from a default value of “off” to a default value of “on”.

Microsoft Teams will then be available to all eligible users with the appropriate license assignment. Once we turn Teams on-by-default, it will become available to those users. IT admins can continue to manage user access to Microsoft Teams via license assignments. Microsoft Teams will be rolled out gradually to all eligible Office 365 users later this quarter. Microsoft Teams is available in the following Office O365 commercial suites: Business Essentials, Business Premium, and Enterprise E1, E3, and E5 plans. Microsoft Teams will also be available to existing E4 customers who purchased E4 before its retirement. Microsoft Teams is not available to Education and Government customers at this time.

What do I need to do to prepare for this change?

If you do not rely on this setting to govern user access to Microsoft Teams, there is no action you need to take. Learn more by going to

 http://teams.microsoft.com.

If you currently rely on this setting to govern user access to Microsoft Teams, please migrate over to managing access via user licensing. Please click Additional Information to learn more, including how to use license assignments to enable or disable user access through Office 365 Admin center and PowerShell.

Azure AD Connect: In place Upgrade Windows Azure Active Directory sync (DirSync)


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Azure AD Connect: In place Upgrade Windows Azure Active Directory sync (DirSync)

*"In-place upgrade" is only relevant if the DB contains less than 50000 objects

Azure AD Connect will analyze your current DirSync settings and recommend an in-place upgrade if the number of objects in your database is less than 50,000

Download Azure AD connect

In-place upgrade Wizard

1. Launch the Azure AD Connect installer (MSI), Review and agree to license terms and privacy notice.

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3. Click next to begin analysis of your existing DirSync installation.

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4. When the analysis completes, we will make recommendations on how to proceed.

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  • If you u use SQL Server Express and have less than 50,000 objects, the following screen is shown:

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  • If you use a full SQL Server for DirSync you will see this page instead

The information regarding the existing SQL Server database server being used by DirSync is displayed. Make appropriate adjustments if needed. Click Next to continue the installation

  • If you have more than 50,000 objects, you will see this screen instead:
    To proceed with an in-place upgrade, click the checkbox next to this message: Continue upgrading DirSync on this computer. To do a parallel deployment instead you will export the DirSync configuration settings and move those to the new server.

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5. Provide the password for the account you currently use to connect to Azure AD. This must be the account currently used by DirSync.

 
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If you receive an error and have problems with connectivity, please see Troubleshoot connectivity problems.

6. Provide an enterprise admin account for Active Directory.

 

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7. You’re now ready to configure. When you click Upgrade, DirSync will be uninstalled and Azure AD Connect will be configured and begin synchronizing.

 

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8. After the installation has completed, sign out and sign in again to Windows before you use Synchronization Service Manager, Synchronization Rule Editor, or try to make any other configuration changes.

Customize Azure AD Connect sync

After your initial installation of Azure AD Connect, you can always start the wizard again from the Azure AD Connect start page or desktop shortcut. You will notice that going through the wizard again provides some new options in the form of Additional tasks.

The following table provides a summary of these tasks and a brief description on each of them.

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