Microsoft Ignite 2019 – Day 1
And seriously, the new capabilities of security and compliance are amazing.
And seriously, the new capabilities of security and compliance are amazing.
In the course of setting up an Advanced eDiscovery demo, I made a discovery of my own: major differences between two versions of Microsoft’s AZCopy utility. Special thanks to my colleague RS for setting me straight and providing some screenshots. While I came across this in Advanced eDiscovery, I’m going to save details on that … Continue reading “AZCopy, New and Old”
Office 365’s eDiscovery options may appear simplistic at first, but they are in fact quite powerful.
For most of the past two years, my Office 365 conversations with clients have focused in whole or in part on understanding Microsoft Teams. Teams is Microsoft’s latest collaboration service, and is in fact built on older collaboration services in Office 365. What makes Teams such a challenge to explain and understand is that your … Continue reading “Understanding Microsoft Teams”
Microsoft is allowing administrators to create a policy that automatically closes out Groups . . .
Waitaminute . . . what’s the techlemode.com contributing to over three-quarters of the spend?
Here is some mostly good news: Microsoft developers can now get perpetual dev tenants for Office 365. Previously, dev tenants were good for one year, and then expired. According to this FAQ, as of April 2019, tenants are good for a minimum of 90 days, but will continue as long as they are in use. … Continue reading “Perpetual Office 365 Developer Tenants”
Working at AvePoint, I have had a lot of conversations about backups and archives. AvePoint makes solutions for both but, often as not, these conversations have a detour that runs something like this: “Senior management doesn’t see a need for a records solution, because we’re backing up every day.” Or: “For now we’re not bothering … Continue reading “Archives =/= Backups”
Supervision has been part of Office 365 since 2017, but it recently underwent some improvements.
. . .Office 365 administrators should understand how it works, in order to establish the configurations and processes that support business requirements. . .