Since last September's Microsoft’s Ignite 2017 conference in Orlando where the company announced that Microsoft Teams will be the future successor to Skype for Business, many customers have been deploying Microsoft Teams as the all-up client to meet the collaboration and communication demands of today's modern workplace. Microsoft Teams brings together many of Office365 services in one place and supersedes Skype's unified communications with intelligent communications. Even now Microsoft is busy porting over all of the calling and conferencing capabilities from Skype for Business to Microsoft Teams and new features are being brought in continuously. This blog post covers some of the features of running Skype for Business and Microsoft Teams side-by-side and what interoperability features are available at the time of this writing. |
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In a previous blog post I wrote about provisioning Exchange mailbox accounts and Skype for Business meeting rooms accounts for Skype Room Devices such as the SurfaceHub and the Skype Room Systems V2 that is already available today. During my initial setup of a Polycom MSR Skype Room System V2 device, even after following the steps in the previous blog post, the device can register and sign-in successfully to a Skype meeting room account that is homed online on Office365. However, using an account that is homed on-premise, I could not get the device to sign in successfully. This blog posts walks through the error encountered and how I managed to resolve the issue
Just recently Microsoft made generally available Skype for Business Online Tenant Dial Plans for organizations on Office365. This new capability, which has been in preview for several months, has been a top feature request among organizations who have moved their PSTN calling capability to CloudPBX in Skype for Business Online. In my previous articles I wrote about Deploying Polycom phones for Cloud PBX with on-premise PSTN Connectivity as well as Cloud Connector Edition (CCE) 1.4.1 Deployment Walkthru Part 1 which are related topics. In this post, I will walk through creating Tenant Dial Pans in CloudPBX and how to use them with Polycom VVX family of qualified IP phones using our test lab environment with an Office365 E5 subscription,
Just a few days ago, Microsoft made generally available new features for Office365 CloudPBX functionality which is the Auto Attendant and Call Queues. As its name implies, Auto Attendant allows companies to create an intelligent virtual receptionist that helps callers navigate the system with interactive prompts, while Call Queues provides a mechanism to offer a single number to call for distribution lists or multiple Skype for Business Online users at the same time. This article walks through the creation of Auto Attendants and Call Queues using the web administrative portal. Do note the following two points which are applicable at the time of this writing:
1. Auto Attendants and Call Queues are supported in a pure-cloud environments. Hybrid environments such as the one seen in this walkthrough are not officially supported 2. Creation and set-up of auto attendants requires either getting or transferring existing toll or toll-free service numbers. In addition, toll-free service numbers require PSTN Consumption Billing to be setup. In this walkthrough we will acquire and use toll-free service numbers for our Auto Attendant and Call Queues but note that none of this will be callable as we do not have PSTN Consumption Billing setup. With the above, lets begin the walk-through. This article explains in detail how Modern Authentication works with the new firmware release UCS5.5.1 for the Polycom VVX family of handsets in an ADFS Federated Identity environment. Polycom VVX phones are a family of Office365 qualified IP phones for Skype for Business. First we go recap some of the basics of what Modern Authentication is and how it works and then show the user experience of the phone user interface during sign-in using modern authentication via the Web Sign-in method available in UCS5.5.1. Fellow MVP Jeff Schertz has covered all the new phone features for this firmware release in his blog post here and thus will not be repeated in this article. We will also provide some debug logs captured on the phone during the sign-in process which may assist in troubleshooting if something does not work.
Skype for Business Meeting room devices are gaining popularity in recent months as companies seek to extend the UC capabilities from the PC desktop to meeting spaces such as huddle rooms, small and medium sized meeting rooms and even large conference rooms. Polycom has been providing native Skype for Business meeting room solutions for many years now, such as the popular Polycom Group Series family of video collaboration endpoints, and more recently the Polycom Trio8800 SmartHub which is the successor to the widely used starfish conference phones but with additional video and content sharing capabilities. In addition, Microsoft's partners are soon to launch the Skype Room Systems V2 solution which adds yet another meeting room device that customers can choose from.
This blog post serves as a guide on how to provision these devices in an Office365 Hybrid environment where an on-premise AD is synced with Azure AD along with ADFS deployed, Exchange is purely online and Skype for Business configured with hybrid setup with some users homed on-premise and some online.
This is the continuation of the post Deploying Polycom phones for Cloud PBX with on-premise PSTN Connectivity. Here we are ready to move on-premise Skype for Business Enterprise Voice enabled accounts to Office365 E5 Cloud PBX. As shown in the previous post, we have already used two on-premise Enterprise Voice accounts to sign in on two different Polycom devices: a VVX600 and a Trio8800. Below is the status of these two devices as seen on from the web admin Lync Status page:
Last week at Enterprise Connect 2016, Polycom and Microsoft made joint announcements which has had profound impact across the entire UC industry. Never before has 2 companies partnered together so closely to bring about a whole new level of innovation and technology for meeting room spaces and collaboration focused built purposefully for the cloud. While there are already several great blog posts on the announcements such as the one from Network World by Zeus Kerravala, this blog posts focuses on what those announcements really mean for customers in practical terms.
Ensuring Pool Quorum and Routing Group Quorum
HA in the Skype4B Front-End pool is the ability of the server pool to continue servicing users in the event of a failure of 1 or more servers within the pool. Front-End pool HA is based on clustering via HLB and DNS load balancing built into the servers to automatically distribute groups of users across the various front end servers in a pool. During startup, 85% of all servers in the pool must be started in order for the entire pool to be functional. This is known as achieving Routing Group level Quorum. After the pool is operational, then only 50% of the servers in the pool must be running in order for the pool to remain functional. This is called achieving Pool Level Quorum and is not to be confused with Routing Group Level Quorum. The table below shows the numbers for these two quorum types: |
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