Djornson wrote:Handheld hoovers! Preferably cordless i guess but not essential. Tempted by a Shark DuoClean which doubles as upright and handheld for £200. Any advise/thoughts?
Kow wrote:Anyone use Microsoft Teams? Does it work with a Hotmail account? I've installed it seems to be telling me I'm not a part of Teams even though I'm logged in. Hitting the link in the email just seems to start a loop of sending a code which just ends up sending more emails. The link in another email tries to open the app but it immediately closes down. Trying to use the web app tells me I need to enable DOM storage. The android app won't open anything either. No idea what's going on.
Andy wrote:Apologies if this is a common question but, considering the role he performs involves very little butlering and much more equipment and costume maintenance, would it not be more accurate to describe Alfred as Batman’s batman?
Djornson wrote:Handheld hoovers! Preferably cordless i guess but not essential. Tempted by a Shark DuoClean which doubles as upright and handheld for £200. Any advise/thoughts?
poprock wrote:‘Butler’ just means the lead male servant. The boss of all the other servants. The one who gets to be the face of the whole serving squad. But DS is right, it’s technically the lead of the house’s serving staff (although ‘house’ isn’t limited to a building, but could cover whole estates or even ‘anywhere your family go’). Whereas a valet is a man’s personal servant. I don’t think one would ever have both. It’s more about which style of service one prefers.
poprock wrote:‘Butler’ just means the lead male servant. The boss of all the other servants. The one who gets to be the face of the whole serving squad. But DS is right, it’s technically the lead of the house’s serving staff (although ‘house’ isn’t limited to a building, but could cover whole estates or even ‘anywhere your family go’). Whereas a valet is a man’s personal servant.
I don’t think one would ever have both. It’s more about which style of service one prefers.
davyK wrote:Re MS Teams - you might be able to use a non-corporate microsoft.com account. Anyone can create a free account and get OneDrive storage for example. I suspect it will integrate easily. You could probably synch your google stuff with that. I reckon support of other accounts will be forthcoming. Teams is still quite young in the product set - we are only starting to use it now ourselves.
To use Microsoft Teams, you need an Office 365 account with the appropriate Office 365 license plan listed below. Talk to your company's IT administrator to get an account or sign your company up for Office 365.
What is the availability for Education and Government customers?
Microsoft Teams is available in all Office 365 A1 suite licensing: Office 365 A1, Office 365 A1 Plus, and Office 365 A5, as well as existing Office 365 A3 customers who purchased E3 prior to its retirement.
Guest access lets you add individual users from outside your organization to your teams and channels in Microsoft Teams.
To compare external access (federation) with guest access (and decide which one you should use), read Communicate with users from other organizations in Teams.
If you're ready to turn on guest access in your organization, start with the Guest access checklist.
Guest access overview
Guest access allows teams in your organization to collaborate with people outside your organization by granting them access to existing teams and channels in Teams. Anyone with a business or consumer email account, such as Outlook, Gmail, or others, can participate as a guest in Teams with full access to team chats, meetings, and files. As the Teams admin, you control which features guests can (and can't) use in Teams - check out Manage guest access.
Guest access is an org-wide setting in Teams and is turned off by default. Guest access is subject to Azure AD and Office 365 service limits.
Important
Guest users follow Teams Org-wide settings for the coexistence Upgrade mode. This can't be changed.
Licensing for guest access
Guest access is included with all Office 365 Business Premium, Office 365 Enterprise, and Office 365 Education subscriptions. No additional Office 365 license is necessary. Teams doesn't restrict the number of guests you can add. However, the total number of guests that can be added to your tenant is based on what your Azure AD licensing allows - usually 5 guests per licensed user. For more information, see Azure AD B2B collaboration licensing.
Note
Users in your organization who have standalone Office 365 subscription plans only, such as Exchange Online Plan 2, cannot be invited as guests to your organization because Teams considers these users to belong to the same organization. For these users to use Teams, they must be assigned an Office 365 Business Premium, Office 365 Enterprise, or Office 365 Education subscription.
Who is a guest?
A guest is someone who isn't an employee, student, or member of your organization. They don't have a school or work account with your organization. For example, guests may include partners, vendors, suppliers, or consultants. Anyone who is not part of your organization can be added as guest in Teams. This means that anyone with a business account (that is, an Azure Active Directory account) or consumer email account (with Outlook.com, Gmail.com or others) can participate as a guest in Teams, with full access to teams and channel experiences.
To learn more about what a guest can and can't do, read Authorize guest access in Microsoft Teams. Or check out the comparison of team member and guest capabilities table.
Finally, all guests in Teams are covered by the same compliance and auditing protection as the rest of Office 365, and can be managed securely within Azure AD.
Why use guest access?
With guest access, organizations that use Teams can provide access to teams, documents in channels, resources, chats, and applications to their partners, while maintaining complete control over their own corporate data. All guests in Teams are covered by the same compliance and auditing protection as the rest of Office 365, and guests can be managed securely within Azure AD.
Understand the limitations for guests
The guest experience has limitations by design. Make sure you understand the guest experience so you don't try to fix something that isn't a problem. For example, here's a list of some of the functionality that isn't available to a guest in Microsoft Teams:
OneDrive for Business
People search outside of Teams
Calendar, Scheduled Meetings, or Meeting Details
PSTN
Organization chart
Create or revise a team
Browse for a team
Upload files to a person-to-person chat
Currently, Teams supports only State 1 and State 2 types of guest users as defined by Azure B2B
For a full list of what a guest can and can't do in Teams, see the comparison of team member and guest capabilities table. To learn more about guest access at the Office 365 level, read Adding guests to Office 365 Groups.
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