 Everybody thanks for joining. This is the Microsoft Community Office Hours and Cast of Thousands as you can see here. Formerly live. Yeah. Formerly live event. We switched things up so we shut down the evening session because Eric wasn't with us and why life is not worth living if Eric's not participating. But we've stretched this out to 90 minutes. We'll get through as many questions as we're able to get through that have been posted out on the Office 365 and Microsoft Teams communities as well as Microsoft Tech Community and provide some nominal value to someone out there. Maybe that's the goal is to maybe help someone. There are a lot of people in the world statistically speaking somebody. Yeah, you could have just paused that. There are a lot of people statistically. Yeah, but, you know, our mission statement, which is written anywhere to maybe help someone somewhere at some point. I'm thinking that is that is good. Now we need the theme music. Eric, we were talking about needing to have some kind of bumper music for the big games. I was thinking like 80s hair metal type thing and come in and. Of course you were does not surprise anybody. All right, let's see any homework we want to report on. I had homework, but it's as of now. Fleet because I was busy working on the presentation. I'm going to give right after this so. Well, I had so I did a bunch of research around the question around. The praise capability within Microsoft Teams, and I talked to people much smarter than me on this topic. Yes, and they were stumped by a few things as well. Here's what we learned. So what we're talking about now, of course, there are third party praise tools that are available that provide leaderboards and other capability. Most people when they're looking at what's done some of the gamification capabilities over in Yammer, they're asking, you know, not surprisingly, hey, when are we going to be able to do some of the same things over within Teams? Or even more so, hey, Microsoft, any chance we can do some of these things and combine the data between the two. And I don't see that happening anytime soon. But some clarification when you use the out of the box praise app that comes inside of Microsoft Teams, it shows up as a message type. It is not then presented anywhere. There is no summary data of praise message types anywhere. Doesn't show up in delves. It only shows up in the message, whether it's in a chat or what's within the threaded discussion. How do you think it's empty praise? Yes, it is, empty praise. So, Mike and I are right. That's good. That is so much stuff. So it is being captured. So I was talking with John White, who as most of us know, CTO over at MVP, dual MVP now I believe, and over at Tigraph. And he was able to go in, send me some screenshots like, yeah, here it is. Here's the message type. The data is captured. So if you have a developer want to go build something, it's captured within the Graph API. You can go and report on and do something around that. So I'm trying to encourage Tigraph for some new product expansion and add some feature capability. Because again, for organizations that use Yammer, it's an important metric to track. And for a manager to be able to go in and look at an individual's profile or look at a team profile and look at the number of praise, especially if you customize the praise tools. If you build a methodology around employee, like peer recognition program, you want to be able to have those leader boards and kind of show different sales organizations. It's a big deal to be able to go in that and track those, the kudos or the win that a manager's give out every time a sale is closed or a customer calls in with great feedback for that sales interaction. But there's just nothing out of the box today. I was surprised. I just assumed it was somewhere and somebody had suggested out in the interwebs, oh yeah, it's up on the Delve profile, like, nope. And I would suggest that also they could use it for pulling in badges that they post to, because Microsoft Tech Community Forums is also has its own API. So you can pull the badges in from there as well. Well, that's the thing. There's other, so there's about a dozen or more different, I've pulled in links for some, so I'm still working on a blog post for this. So John and I, I've got some questions still that we're trying, we're investigating. But some of the requests are around those custom badging. So it's exactly that. So there's the praise capability that you wanna have also as part of the profile, the badges, third-party badges, external badges. There's requests, I mean, there's been for years for LinkedIn to be able to recognize some of that badging capability. I think they've done. I think you can now go and create custom badges. I don't think you can. Okay, there's been talk about it, but it's not something I've been out there and pursuing, but I know that to complete a course, and of course, if we all see people sharing when they've completed a certification or some kind of program, kind of the image, but that's kind of the same as the praise within teams. It's just an image shared within a message that's posted. There's no tracking of that badge. So it would be the ability to have on your personal profile for managers to be able to build that off that leaderboards, tracking of that capability. Think about that. If you're using Pluralsight and some other internal education tools, like Visual SP and you complete courses or Microsoft certifications, me as a manager would have to go manually add in badges and profiles and track all that stuff. I just wanna have that automated. If they complete that successfully past the exam, they're awarded the badge, it shows up in their profile and whether they're LinkedIn page or their profile out on teams. And then as team members are giving Eric kudos for being on time for a call, he hasn't received one yet, but when he receives one, for that to show prominently on his profile, that would be wonderful. Wouldn't it, Eric? You know, I'm feeling really good about tonight's call. So we'll just have to see how that works out. It's a nice call that isn't happening. I feel good too. Yeah. That's the one. Yeah. Do we get badges, Christian? Do we get badges? Do we get badges? We don't need no stinking badges, Mike. And there it is. And there it is, there it is. I know you're fishing for it, I know, I know. Anything else? Hal, didn't you have a piece of homework? Didn't we throw something at you as well? That you kind of like, like, I don't know if that's me. I don't know if that's me. I probably got it. Okay. That's fine. Somebody can find it, I'll look at it for you. Yeah, that's all right. Well, so let's do t-shirts before we get started. Let's see it, Sean. Slight deviation from the tech theme today. Oh, love it. Love it. For my birthday. Awesome. So, classic. Yes. Yeah, it's just important to have this one in rotation. The other, the new shipment showed up. So that's the same shirt that Hal wears every show. I wonder if he actually changes his clothes. Do you actually change clothes, Hal? Mike, it's actually a tattoo. I heard he has eight of them and they're always in rotation. I'm now fearful of how much skin he was able to bring out before we do that. Mr. Fantastic. All right, well, let's jump in. Let's say, Sean, you were good with talking about number one here. Anybody else have any thoughts on the questions that asked? I mean, we'll kind of, we'll go through the three that Sean had kind of highlighted and then we'll, so we'll jump around off the list if that's all right. I grabbed the low-hanging fruit as quickly as I could. It's your show, brother. Yeah. So let's start with question number one. So, I'm gonna butcher that name, but Q-ong, Q-ong says, hello, everyone. I had Office 365 page with domain name ABC previously. Due to changes by the business, we would need to change the domain name to XY, X-Z-Y. It also must be changed for SharePoint. As an example, ABC.SharePoint to, you know, X-Y-Z.SharePoint.com. May you advise how to perform to change them? Well, there are a number of posts on people who want this. I mean, changing the domain name, Cascades, through all sorts of things. But there's somebody who did this and blogged about it, and I posted that link in the chat window. It was recently as February of this year, so this is an old information. And there is a actual user voice request where Microsoft had commented. This got, the user voice request got over 12,000 upvotes. Wow. And it's in the plans. So you're saying it's a problem? Yeah. It seems many people think the same thing. So you're saying there's a chance? Yeah, you're saying there's a chance. So there's a private program right now, at least it's in, like, Preview, that this guy was able to take advantage of. And he linked to the user voice where this is detailed. But as far as changing your domain name, I would start by talking to Microsoft to see how they can help you with that. Because as mentioned, it goes way beyond just changing the domain name and seeing the change in SharePoint. It's gonna cascade to absolutely everything in every workload. You think about things like one drive synchronization. You think about email being sent. There's all sorts of email records that need to be changed. So it's just not as easy as flipping a switch. Or rather, it's not as easy as flipping a switch and having things automatically or automatically work. So those two links go through some good stuff. Yeah, we've had a few questions. I think people have asked variations on this. And of course, we see kind of the other, the sister problem of the multiple domains and how to best manage that and moving between them and has some similar problems. One of the things that I've always pointed out when I was working with folks that were getting onto 365 or getting into Azure was to plan that out. Because they always thought, well, we're just gonna bring over our existing domain name or we're just gonna keep this on Microsoft.com, control domain, and we're gonna have everybody go through that. That's something you really gotta plan because it's not like Sean said, it ties to everything, first of all, but also it affects DNS. I mean, and we know what kind of animal DNS is. It's just 48, 72 hours, two weeks, who knows? So that's something you really gotta plan for. And I understand you get bought by a company, you get merged, you get whatever, that's happened before to other companies and a lot of them probably just migrate, create a new domain, migrate all the stuff. Until Microsoft comes up with a solution, which I mean, that's gonna be a monumental solution. That might be the only answer. Yeah, well, you mentioned domain are a rather tenant to tenant migrations and I've been a part of several of those over time and they're more frequent than you might think. People have to change everything up at once and start fresh and go to a new tenant, sadly. Well, you know, the other piece of this as well is especially if you are moving over, if you've got historical SharePoint environments, if you've used Yammer, if you have these other components in place of the naming conventions across all these different pieces. If you're doing any movement, any upgrade of any one of those pieces, that's part of that planning as well. And then to go and look at, hey, is this the right domain or are we integrating multiple domains in or multiple locations? And then ask those questions too, is like, are we going to be in acquisition mode or be acquired or acquire another company later in the year? What happens then? What are the best practices? How are we going to handle each of those pieces? So, yeah, it's bigger than just this one question. Advice, retire before it's a problem. Well, no, and that's actually what I was going to say is I worked with an insurance company that got acquired by a bigger insurance company and one of the CIS admins there was we were talking about the whole conversion process and getting all of their 365 stuff into the new tenant and all that kind of stuff. And anyways, her comment to me was, well, I'm pretty much guaranteed a job for the next couple of years. Yeah, sad that it has to be looked at that way, but yeah, I guess that is a silver lining or more than a silver lining for some people. Job for life? Yeah. That's teaching and getting tenure to college. My wife has a job for life. Probably doing a place for that. That's government. My wife is county government, so it's almost impossible to get fired from county government. That's why my goal is to become a dictator of a small country, somewhere in the world. I'm not that picky, but it's all about the job security. There's a couple of islands out there that you could pick up. Had any good interviews lately? Couldn't do any worse than some of them, yeah, so. All right, how about we'll jump down to get the other two, Sean, since Sean has to leave 15, 20 minutes early, let's make sure we get to his stuff first. Number six. All about me. Arnon asks, I have office family and I want to use auto-save directly to my computer locally without using OneDrive. For some reason, the only option available is OneDrive. Does anyone know if this is possible and how it is done? That's your only option right now. You can go to SharePoint, you can go to OneDrive, but. Use your words, Sean. I included a nice link where it's spelled out pretty clearly. In fact, this is the kind of MVP response that really just kind of cuts to the chase. At the top, he says, you can't. And then it goes on to explain new auto-save feature was forced onto your QAT, only works with OneDrive. And he talks about how auto-save came to become the thing that it is. So he's got a little background there, but the short answer, the too long didn't read answer is sorry. No way there from here, Arnon. Yeah. You just set up the sync, so you've got it locally. If that's the issue, if you want to have them in that one place, but right, that's the sync engine. It's OneDrive, so. Yeah. Well, he's got it off as a family. So does he even have OneDrive on the back end with that? Yes, he does. Does he know it? Ha ha ha. I can't tell you. So I guess the answer here, Arnon, is check out your OneDrive options. I know you don't want to necessarily do that, but the way to backdoor this is if you can get it in OneDrive and you've got OneDrive, as Hal indicates you do, set up the sync client with OneDrive and synchronize it to a place on your local system. Then the sync client, or you can save to your local system individually and get it synced up to the cloud vice versa. If you've got that sync client running and you do implement the back end storage. But no way to go straight from office products to your local system with autosave. Right. All right. That's it. Again, that just reminds me of like my favorite Jeff Teeper response of all time, which is simplify your requirements. All right. Number 11, Amanda. This is a longer question, multi-part question here. So I have SharePoint site. Let's call it site A that we are all going to delete, but we have two pages on that site that need to be moved to a different site. Let's call that site B. Site B. Those pages are instrumental for two other processes and both have unique permissions and document libraries that were all created under the site A settings. I'm assuming when we actually delete site A, we lose those pages. The document libraries and permission groups since they were created under that site. So my questions are. Are correct. Is my assumption correct? And by deleting site A, we'll lose the pages, the document libraries and the groups. It all goes bye-bye. Correct. Part two, is it possible to move the two pages over to site B without having to complete recreate them? That depends. The page is what they depend on. I mean, have you got a custom master page? This is the whole basis for migration software. You might be able to hack it with something like SharePoint Designer, but I sense from the way this is phrased and whatnot that you're probably not a regular SharePoint power user or somebody who would actually want to try anything in SharePoint Designer. You're mentioning SharePoint Designer, really? I mentioned it. I'll mention options. I am not validating those whatsoever. I wouldn't do it. My t-shirt next week is going to say Sean recommends SharePoint Designer. Yeah, I think not. But yeah, those pages, you may see an individual page or two individual pages when you go to it in SharePoint. The problem is those pages more often than not have extensive dependency hierarchies under the hood, like I was saying, master pages, CSS, JavaScript, you talk about custom permissions. Those exist at the top of the site collection and those are used in your custom permissions. So those have to be migrated separately. So you end up needing a migration tool to do it right. There's the SharePoint Migration Assessment Toolkit, the SM, the SMAT. I guess I should have gotten a link for that right off the bat, which we can post in here. And for those just really quick background too, for folks that don't know of a SharePoint people, we often joke about SharePoint Designer and a lot of people relied on it for a long time to go in there and customize their sites to make it look more of what they needed and to create some basic automations that are out there. But historically what it was was front page that got rebranded. It actually had features stripped away and then rebranded and dedicated, like the only people really using it were SharePoint. Like I remember when I was, so I was at Microsoft from 2006 to 2009 and front page, like I hated it for different reasons, for the web stuff, like all the crap that it would attach, the crap code, it would do something simple and it forced me to go back and kind of refresh some of my HTML capabilities, just because it was frustrating, you just, you move one item, a line, you drag something and it just throws in crap code. It just was really bulky, just awful. And so that's some of the history that's there. So it's been, so it got rebranded as SharePoint Designer used specifically for that purpose. And- It wasn't actually a rebranding. It was front page of split out into SharePoint Designer and Expression Web. So- Expression was already something else. It got redirected over to Expression. The Expression Suite was more than, it wasn't, that was a, it already was a separate product. In 2003, Aaron? I don't have the complete history of that, of the Expression Suite, because I was so into the Expression Suite, but I'm pretty sure that, maybe not, maybe the Expression Web was added to the other Expression Tools because they had the Adobe Lite, like the design tools of the other aspects, which were part of the Expression Suite, so yeah. So maybe you're right on that homework. This is an opportunity to prove me wrong. That's just it. He's going for the whole prove Sean wrong angle on this, not giving information, not giving valuable information. What's fantastic about this, so I know I just had dinner at the VP who owned the Expression Suite on Saturday night, and so I'm just going to call Bill, another Bill. All the Bill is still the answer. Now he's named her up and said- That's right, Mike. There's only one Bill that he could possibly be calling. I mean, it could be anybody. That's true. Well, you know what? I'm sure Bill Baer knows the answer to this question too. I'll ask both Bills. All right, sorry, Sean interrupted you. Part three of her question, is it possible to move the document libraries over to Site B without having to completely recreate them? That's kind of the same answer. Yeah, well, that one is probably the easiest, or the most likely to succeed. It'll depend on if you've got Site Columns implemented in that list, content types, but either way, I put the migration assessment toolkit link in the chat window. That would be, if you're going for the cheap, try to get it done route. I would recommend looking at the migration assessment toolkit as a first stop because it'll recognize those dependencies. The whole point of me mentioning SharePoint Designer was because SharePoint Designer had the ability to leverage the content deployment API and could generate an export package with dependency chains of items. So if you had a page and it happened to reference CSS and other things, that could be packaged into an export file. And that file, hypothetically, could be brought into a SharePoint site. I don't think that works anymore for SharePoint Online, but it would work between two on-prem sites. Yeah, but what you're talking about is still talking about standing up those pages to look and function like they were on Site A. The part four of her question is, is it possible to move the user groups over to Site B? It was like, well, yeah, you can go in and look at the permissions, everybody who has access and set them up with the same permissions. The problem then becomes any of those automations or integrations that you have with Site A, those sites don't change. It doesn't automatically recognize the new. So you're still gonna have to go and do cleanup to find all those other links and go transform those, point them, redirect them to the new site, but the automations and retest them over. This is where you start to get into that situation of, there's a lot of effort involved there. Would it have been easier just to migrate the content, the structure and rebuild the automations? Yeah, and oftentimes the answer to that question is, yes, and a lot of organizations start at that point trying to bring the stuff over piecemeal. Invariably, something gets missed. Right. Well, that's why I think one thing that, having worked for Sean and I, both of us for two different, acquired by the same company, but we're working for two different migration, SharePoint migration ISVs, the whole idea, the concept of the iterative migration of moving a little bit, testing it and going back and look at this. That's one of the reasons why we strove for that iterative migration capability so that you could test out the site, test out those automations, roll back pieces without having to move everything or giant portions across or seeing filters and not understanding why. So it allowed for better piloting testing out of that. Yeah, like, migration is an art, not a science. It's the, what does Snipes say in Harry Potter? He says it's about Alchemy, about his potions class. It's the subtle science and the, or the, I'm trying to remember, there's a great quote, now I can't remember it. Somebody write down the date and time that Christian's quoting Harry Potter. It's only the worst source of all worldly knowledge at our fingertips. You had the quote? I didn't go looking for it. I saw that you were on it. Yeah, let me see. Oh, he says you were, click on the link to open it. See, you are here to learn the subtle science and exact art. Of potion making. So that's what migration is. Yeah, that's good way to put it. The subtle science and exact art of migration. That's very spot on. All right, I'll add that into the liner notes for the notes. It'll be on the DVD that you can purchase. We'll have that purchasing information later in the show. Oh, and we will sell DVD readers with that. That's right. All right, Eric, I don't know if you had any questions that you wanted to focus on. Those are the three that Sean had. Beyond the meaning of life and all those. Otherwise I'll go to number two. Yeah, no, I was with a client on morning so I was not able to review. No worries. So Christina. It was also a cloud morning. I will now carefully enunciate all my words. Thank you. Christina asks, I asked the other day about the iPhone calendar not syncing with web outlook. I understand that if I have the Outlook calendar as default, that solves the problem. But having said that, if I create invites from the default calendar and Outlook, using the iPhone calendar app, it doesn't give you an option to add invitees. Why is this? Is there a workaround? I need my iPhone calendar and Outlook web to sync. I have an Android. I'm sorry, I'm useless on this. Yeah, so for me, so I see it in both places because my wife uses iPhone calendar. I don't. So it does the sync. And so she can see those activities, but I'm using Outlook as my primary. So I'm just, I know that's not an answer. Well, it is an answer. It is an answer, yes. Not the one she's looking for. Desired one. This isn't the answer you're looking for. Yeah, no, I mean, this has been a common problem, right? Between mobile and desktop Outlook, if she's actually, is she using actual mobile Outlook? That sort of sounds like, yeah. Okay, so she's actually using the Outlook app, not the iOS mail. Outlook web, so OWA. Okay, so she's using on her phone though. She's not using an app on her phone, she's using a web on the phone? Well, she's, that's a question. We need more input because if it is the iOS mail app or the iOS calendar app, that's gonna sync differently than the Microsoft Outlook app. And it's gonna sync, obviously if you're using OWA, then it's just pulling directly from Outlook.com. So there should be no difference there. Cause that's a source of all truth, right? I mean, it's what's out there in the cloud. So a lot of variables there. I mean, I've seen people use the Gmail client to pull in Office 365 accounts and that calls all kinds of headaches. So. Well, I know that I've had some scenarios and I apologize, I wasn't paying enough attention to know if it was, because there's a combination of using, web-based in the browser, the desktop apps and the mobile apps, but sometimes where, again, it wouldn't allow me to add invitees, but I could forward it and attach the people's names, forward them to that and invite them that way. So that's a workaround for that scenario. But I don't know what combination of things that led to me not having the add people to that calendar item. But that's always the workaround is for the calendar item, they'll receive it. And if they then accept it and it forwards that invite, then how's it coming back in? Then it kind of solves that problem. Okay. Can I do a number five? Yeah. Let me, hang on, I'm just gonna mark that one and jump down. So Mr. Box sounds very personalized, it has question about anomaly detection. Hi, I would like to detect anomalies across multiple fields that are not numeric. So for example, looking for unusual Azure and add sign-in events, using source IP, app name, account name, client name. To the best of my readings, Sentinel has time series, analytic capabilities that can easily detect anomalies, however only on continuous numeric field. What I'm looking for is a way to perform anomaly detection from the event data, where when the event data is categorical, so IP addresses account names rather than numeric. Splunk has a solution, but he's looking for something that can happen with Sentinel or any other pointers or guides. Yeah, so the thing about CUSO is, it's just a query language. That's all you're doing is you're querying a backend and the log analytics data. Now, of course you can access everything through the REST API or the Graph API, which is kind of like a REST API. Anyways, what you're looking for, what this particular scenario, what you're looking for is you're looking to change a numerical field to a string or to a different class object inside of programming. And that's not an easy thing to do. So the way Splunk does it, I have no clue. I don't know how they go in and manipulate the data. They suck the data in. Once they have the data, they can do whatever they want to it. They can change context, they can change object classes, they can do whatever they want. So you need to take the data as is that's taken out of Sentinel via either the Graph API or direct customer queries and manipulate that data on your end, not on, you can't manipulate that data when it's inside of Azure. You have to pull it out and then you can do whatever you want with it. And sometimes changing a numerical string to a numerical field to a string isn't that difficult. It's just now you've got to hunt down what you actually want output. So you're not talking about a small project here and I don't think there's an easy fix. I'm picking up a lot of background noise from... Hearing yes, Fuzz. Maybe somebody turned on a fan. I was getting the fan over his head. Yeah, he just muted and it didn't change. Let me try me. That fan would have to be running high enough that paperwork would be flying around his kitchen, I think, to be muted. Can you hear me now? Yeah, it's still going. John, you tried muting. Weird. It's Riz. Is it me? It's always Riz. Now there's a vacuum cleaner going in the background, but that, I'll set on mute. No, that was Riz. You went muting, it's gone. So anyways, yeah, to answer the question for Mr. Box, you're gonna have to do some custom code there as far as, you know, and it doesn't appear what you want. Is that difficult? I just don't know what kind of aptitude you have for coding for that type of work. Yeah. Well, it doesn't look like something he's looking for a solution, just from reading that, that is necessarily UI driven. Sounds like he's just looking for some advice on what to go and build and pursue that, but yeah. You need to get good with these. Yes. Regular expressions. Yeah. Regular expressions. All right. Not the same. Not the same, slightly different. Number three, Merko asks, my customer provision Microsoft 365 groups and with this teams, it was all run by the IT department. I'm gonna paraphrase here, but he allowed other permissions for users, so owner permissions for users. With this, they could rename teams and a group behind it. Is there any way to prevent this? Take away the permissions. Yeah. Yes. It's easy to give them, it's easy to take them away. Yeah. Don't give your end users owner permissions. Yeah, exactly. Now that being said, you can create custom permission levels that deal with individual granular permission grants. That's the extensive over engineered solution that might get you to what you want, but the easy thing is just pluck the ownership away from them and make them members. Well, this is, and I know a lot of smaller organizations that say, well, then, you know, I'm having to go in and do a lot more centrally where I want people to be able to kind of self serve. And it's like, look, depending on the culture of your organization and what needs to be done, I mean, again, historically, in the SharePoint space, where 99.9% of the issues that you experienced started with the permissions. And as the kind of the root, it's turning out to be that way with teams. It's why a lot of organizations are really excited about building out around the templates, having a formal provisioning process in place so that it is a more controlled consumption of the services. And that you can then go in and create roles for your users. Maybe you have members for everybody across the board, but you have a subgroup of people who have shown to be more trusted. They've gone through some training and they might have heightened permissions in some areas and they can create, they can add teams and take away teams and moderate and all those kinds of things. But if you're in an organization that has the wide open, everyone's an owner, anyone can go and create and trust, recognize that you then have to have a very robust and active community management model and that you're policing and correcting behavior as you go. No more free range users. But they're so delicious, Sean. I was expecting something like that. I just like how they taste. I want those Costco corn fed with, what else did they put all of the drugs that they pump into their chickens. I want that kind of like Costco chicken. We've talked about this in the past, why I jumped immediately to that. Everyone knows if you've not purchased chicken from Costco, it's unnaturally just tasty and bulky and you can freeze it for six months and thaw it out and it tastes fresh. It's not natural, but it's delicious. Filled with epic freeze. And I, correct. And I'm growing that third arm on the back. I've talked about it. I'm not ashamed from all my genetically modified foods. That's all right. I've moved past it. I've risen above it. On your third leg. That's right. All right. Number four, Adam asks, I have linked my Windows 10 Pro laptop to Office 365 domain. Is there any way for users to enter a username instead of entering their whole email address to log into the computers? Well, unless, well, the answer is yes, but it's going to be a different account. I mean, if you're trying to log into a local account versus something that's brokered by the cloud or Office 365, I guess we need to know what your domain situation is. If you've got an on-prem domain, that's being synchronized. If this is a personal laptop, many, if it was set up with your standard UPN, which is typically your email address, then you're probably going to be logging in that way unless you create a specific local account for that person to log into. My understanding is that when you log in to do it that way, you're logging into the local machine, not the domain. Right. But always used to be domain back slash username. Well, my understanding is when you actually go through Intune and you set up a Windows 10 laptop or a Windows 10 machine through the AD join functionality, you have to specify the email address because that's how a Windows 10 identifies your tenant. It doesn't identify it with a domain slash username. That's only with domain join, AAD domain join. Yeah, that's basically we need more information. You can still, I mean, those accounts, that those machines, you can still log into a local account. Yeah, exactly. And the only problem with that is that if the user, depends on your support model, if the user has questions and they're going to contact Microsoft or another support org and they don't know that it's that their email or whatever it could be confusing. But yeah, not so much. Who do you work for? Yeah, I know they can figure that stuff out, but yeah. So if you've got additional details, email us. What is that email, Sean? That's a good question, what is that? He's got a look. Office hours. Office hours at collabtalk.com. Dot com, see I need to have that little sound effect just to do the dot com, that's stolen from who? It's a... Well, you start singing it, you'll know. At the cease and desist order. That's right. Don't call us, we'll call you. And I got a suggestion just real quick here, Christian. Yeah. When we have these longer questions, you know, maybe it might be worth actually putting the questions up on a screen and having, you know, the actual people will be able to read it rather than having to regurgitate everything, but having an actual, you know, having it up on the screen. Which you can do. And instead of res, we put the questions right there. And we put them right over his face and blur the back, the blur his face and put it right. That's a good suggestion. I, you know, I could do that and stick them on a PowerPoint and switch between the slides. And that would be easy for us to then to shuffle the questions in the order that we wanna go through them as well. So a suggestion. And this is just a suggestion, you know, because you are the master, the maestro, the emcee. Graham Puba, that's what I refer to as. Yeah, Graham Puba. Big cheese, head honcho, you know, all that. Yeah, yeah. That too. No, have another device login and have a fourth screen, a fifth screen up here that just has it. So you don't have to switch, you know, just have it where the questions are up on the screen. And you can just, you know, if you haven't done the laptop, I don't know, but I'm assuming you do, you know, you'd be able to do that. Figure that out. Yeah, you could use OBS and do lower thirds too. That's true. Hey. Yeah. You can use the game show host. You can use the Power Automate built in function 365 that will take a list and just dump it out into PowerPoint as well. Yes. Sounds over engineered. Take, take simple list. Put each one on slide. What are you next? With our short 27 step process. Homework, add questions to slides. All right. Number seven, another Windows 10 question. Jay Dutton asks, when I first installed Windows 10, it somehow added my account twice. Since then the computer will not turn off because it thinks the other account is still on. Both accounts are identical. I have to hold the power button down to turn it off. How can I get the extra account off? I've tried everything. So first of all, has it tried everything technically because something is going to work? Yeah. Jay, what is it? Jay Dutton? Jay Dutton, you're technically incorrect. They are not identical because these have separate goods or separate SIDS, if you will, but. Now you're getting real technically. Yeah. Hashtag fake news, Jay Dutton. It's just a SID, man. It's just a SID. Leave it alone. Anyways, the thing is, is that I would place money that one of them is set up as a local account, even though it's got the same name or name at tenant name or tenant name, whatever. But it's just Windows 10's got it set as a local account. And the other one set as a domain account or Azure AD account. The part of this that really foggles my mind is he can't turn the computer off? That's good. I don't think that has anything to do with this. I mean, obviously that, you know, that doesn't. Yeah. Well, usually you just get a warning about if you turn this off, the other person's gonna get disconnected and they're working and you have to get saved. Yeah. Yeah. But that other person actually has to log in. So there has to be another session and you can see that in Task Manager, right? And you can go in there and you can click on the users tab. Yes, five sessions. Yeah, and you can see the sessions that are going on. So. But so Jay Dutton, to confirm what Mike is saying, you would need to go into users and groups in Windows and see if you have an account that's there under users. So careful about that, because most people with Windows 10, if they're not used to like Windows 7 or earlier, Windows 8 and earlier, is they don't know about users and groups because every time you try and do a user and a group, it takes you to do the account settings, which is different than users and groups. So you wanna go in through control panel, go into computer management and then go into local users and groups to find out exactly what users are active on the machine. If you go into accounts, it's just, it's too vague. It doesn't tell you all the details, you know. It's like the lightweight app on top of Windows. Yeah, yeah, it's making it easy for folks who don't understand that, but go into control panel and you should be able to find it there. Or just hit the go to hit start and just start typing computer management as well if you can't find it. Yeah, yeah. Is there any difference with those two profiles? If he's logged in and primarily using the non-administrator, maybe the other ones in administrator, any difference in what you just described if the other account is the administrator account? Yeah, potentially. But you'd still, turning it off, you'd still get that warning, like hey, you're gonna turn off, but you can still proceed. Yeah. So things get a little bit more complex if he's running under an account. He needs at least one local account on his system in case something goes wrong and he's gotta somehow recover because if you go into the recovery tools with Windows, you don't have a local account. That's not told by Microsoft though. That's told by Sean, right? Because Microsoft doesn't tell people to create a local account as a backdoor. Well, they don't. They tell people, no, no, no, no. When you get a new machine and it's in OOB mode, out of box mode, when you start to wear it up, it wants you to log in as a Microsoft account. You have to find this little text in the bottom that says, create offline account or create whatever, you have to hunt for that. So they just want that one account that connects online and syncs everything between your computers and keeps everything in your Microsoft account. But you're not actually told, hey, you might wanna create another account that gives you a backdoor in case something goes wrong. That's just good advice, but. Yeah, that's from the old NT4 days. You have a local account on the machine. So yeah, what I'm advocating is not what I think you'll hear from Microsoft, but if you talk to any Windows administrator, they're gonna tell you you need a local account to do recovery and any sort of other operations that are not tied to online. I think the place he wants to be is if you run NetPLWiz, that's the users and groups management. Where is it, I'm sorry? NetPLWiz, N-E-T-P-L-W-Y-Z. I don't know about that. Well, maybe it is. That's one place. I'm thinking of the old, you know, the one that's got the tree view on the left. Yeah, the users and groups. Yeah, so yeah. But if you, so anyway, what I was saying is if he does not, if he's running under an account that doesn't have local admin rights or is an administrator, and will he even be able to wipe out the local account that is? I don't know. He has to be an admin on the machine. Now you could have a online account that's an admin. It all depends on, he has to go in and find out who's admin and who's not. So if he goes into users and groups, he goes into groups, he goes into local administrators or into administrators, and then you'll be able to see, you know, obviously what account is part of that group. And that account he has to go into and then he can wipe out the other group. So Jay Dutton, I don't think we have a very simple answer for you. In fact, I don't even think we've got a moderately simple answer for you. It depends on too many things. Yeah, there's a bunch of variables here. I mean, number one, make sure that you can actually see both accounts. Go into users and groups, don't go into the account settings, go into user groups, make sure you can see, find out what account is actually administrator, and if the account that you wanna keep as administrator, you're golden, go out and delete the other account. Simple as that. If the account that you wanna keep is not administrator, then you have to find that account in the users and groups, right click on it, go to group membership, add it to the administrator groups, get back out, log in as that user, and then kill the other group, or the other user. And then you're only gonna have one user on that machine. Now, caution, once you get rid of that user, you're gonna lose all of their settings. You're gonna lose all their files. They're gonna use, I mean, they're gone. So if you got anything in the downloads directory, the documents directory, anything like that, gone. I was just gonna call this like, Mike is recommending the Logan's Run approach. Of course. Of course. The other users flying around that they explode in the fireworks and lights. Renewal, renew. It's a little, it's the little heart plug light that's, they're red, time to eliminate them. I like referencing modern, like very in the now movies, like Logan's Run. All right. In the now from 28 years ago. There are a lot of users saying, Logan's What? You talking about Wolverine? That's it. Yeah. I always liked that scene too, with the ice robot thing. It's one of those, it's like running away from the blob in the movie where the people like, ah, ah, they fall to the ground. Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, yeah. Five minutes later, the blob overruns them. That's for a fish called Wanda. Ken's going to kill me. Steve Roller. Are you going to whack her, Ken? Ken, oh my God, he's going to whack her. Deadpool. We've been chasing the guy with the Zamboni. Yeah. Will asks the question number eight. I'm trying to understand why the new Microsoft list object couldn't be better accomplished with a shared Excel file containing a table. Is there something better about a list? I mean, because sharing an Excel file via email, and why isn't that better? And I'm going to write a strongly, yeah, I'm going to write a strongly worded letter and send it via first class to Will. Yeah, so why would somebody use the new Microsoft list and not just an Excel file with a table? Let's see, check-in, check-out, version history, permissioning, all sorts of extra wowies-owies. I'm just thinking. Is it more functional? Yeah, more functional. Bottom line, Will, more functional. Love it, live it. Mike Nelson's life lessons. And that movie references so much newer than Logan's Run, so. By like what, five years? Six years. Not even. All right, Karo the Green. This is a good question. It's like, is there a way to share a file in Office 365 for hours? So first of all, that could be Karathegrin. But you know, you could call it whatever you like there. Yeah. You know, that's Karathegrin. Karathegrin? Karathegrin, yeah. Karathegrin. Yeah. Karathegrin, there you go. I think the max limit in OneDrive is three hours, isn't it, for a share? The main limit? Yeah. Am I right on that or? I thought there was, you could set a limit on a shared file, but there was like a one hour or three at three hour. And I don't remember what the other settings were. So the way to share it for the only the period of time that you want is to send people the sharing link. And when you're done with it, move the file somewhere else. So am I thinking, I thought there was a time limit, maybe I'm thinking of like Citrix share file, because I can actually set a time limit on those files. I don't know. I didn't say it's possible or not. I've never set a limit on anything that I've ever shared that way. So that's nice. Sean, that's just mean. What, remove the file? Yes. Well, if you want, I want to share it for 15 minutes. Go. The end of 15 minutes, you move the file. That's definitely a life hack. Yeah, that is totally a hack. If I right click on a file, which I'm doing right now, and I go share, and I do the change, set an expiration date. So you can set an expiration date, but you can't set a timeframe. So you think it may be IRM, Mike, Azure Information? No, no, no, no. I'm thinking of another service outside of Microsoft. I think a Citrix share file allows you to do that. But I'm trying to understand what Karatha Green, or Carol the Green, whatever. Carol, he green. You know, there's only one L in there. No, it's not even an L. It's a carrot. Getting stuck on the name. It could be carrot. All right. As we insult our users. Yeah, well, share file for hours in Office 365. Where, help me guys. Where do you share file in Office 365 except for OneDrive? Yeah. Well, you can share from the individual office applications, but it's essentially, it's a OneDrive for business. So it's SharePoint OneDrive capability. So it's the same feature. I mean, all I see is the ability to set it for, yeah, I can see that I can set it for, but the least amount of time I could set it is end of day tomorrow. Yeah. That's it. There is no hour setting. Yeah. And now I'm looking at, and just to compare it from a competitor standpoint here, Citrix share file allows you to set actual minutes. So you can actually say it's only available for 10 minutes. It's only available for whatever. So. So for the five people that use that, fantastic. Yeah. Now, but I mean, that's a good point. I don't think, I have not seen that level of granularity anywhere. Dropbox. Dropbox. And Dropbox. Yeah. Dropbox allows you to do that. I'm looking in Dropbox right now. Did in Box or Dropbox? One of them allows you to do that. Dropbox. I know Dropbox. And I just became aware of there's a new Dropbox app, which obviously I know. I know I just deleted it off my system. I realized that I was paying for it for years. It came up for renewal, the annual. And the vendor, design vendor that I worked with, it's the last one. I had one client two years ago, and this design vendor that I've not worked with it over a year that I needed to use Dropbox. But I just, I've not needed it. It lost a lot of market share. I'll tell you that. Yeah. Except from people like me who have lots of shared files in Dropbox. And if I change them, they're going to break tons of links, and that's more of a pain to fix up. Yeah. I just call it being lazy. Being lazy. I guess. Number 10, Christian. All right, number 10. Is Windows Media Center ever coming back? And that's from Kingman MP4. Someone that has MP4 in their ID. And he stuck on that, that various technology. Kingman MP4, you need to look at Plex or? No, you need to look at, I mean, I gotta tell you, this is kind of a pet peeve for me because when Microsoft starts promoting groove music, that is the absolute, I mean, that should go away with the Zoom. It should just disappear. I know you're going to pull it out, Christian. I know you are. I had it ready to go. It's like Rob Foster's foot that Zoom just comes out. Rube music was one of the many worst decisions that they've made. Has something happened to that? Is that getting retired, or am I just wishful thinking? I hope so. Nobody just used it. No, but you know, Windows Media Center, well, the. Now you're talking about the whole thing here, not just the player. I know, not just the player. Yeah, the player, of course, is still there. I use it still, so. Yeah, but this is the encoder, you know, the whole bit. Is there like an open source version of that? Or the media center? I don't know that. I mean, you can do everything in a, you know, you can't have the visualizations and all that kind of stuff. I'm sure Winamp, you know, Winamp can do encoding and you can visualize everything, but it can't do, you know, I think Winamp can even do video now. Yeah, actually it's been able to do it for a while. Yeah. One of those guys who paid to support Winamp. Oh, and they're going to be releasing a new Winamp. It's being renewed. Somebody actually is saving it. Awesome. If you go out to Winamp, they're making some noise about that, so. Here's my, I'm sharing on screen my Zoom app. Oh my God. Abba, yeah, you got Abba there, I see that, yeah. I have thousands of, yeah. But as you can see, it's not letting me scroll. It's like, I don't know what's going on there, but yeah. So I'm going to put a link in the chat window, how to install Windows Media Center on Windows 10. You can, people have done it and you can actually pull the XP version. That's what you have to do because it died in XP, right? It was in that timeframe, I think, yeah. Yeah, it's just like the games, right? Because people like the old Solitaire game. And if you remember that, the one from, what was it called, Spider? Spider or something like that? Spider Solitaire. Spider Solitaire, yeah. And people love that. And when Windows 7 came out, they got rid of it. And now somebody went back and back ported it, so now it'll actually run on Windows 10. I think a component of that was part of, one way you get away with it a little longer is if you had a Windows Home Server. Yeah. You install it. Yeah, whatever happens, Windows Home Server. It's funny, the old games I was thinking about. So I miss, I was thinking the other day that I miss my old, grew up with a Mac and in high school and had for years, but it was the reverse e-game. And of course, there are versions of it everywhere, but. Mine Sweeper, man. Mine Sweeper was the bomb. Literally. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Good phrasing there. All right. Susan, number 12. And how are we doing on time with you, Sean? Just wanna be. I was gonna say, I'm gonna need to pull out of here just in a second. Go ahead and go through Susan's and all. Susan asks, hi, anyone know if Whiteboard will be part of the Microsoft 365 Groups? So the team who has a Teams can all see the Whiteboard used or is it only on our personal profile and we'd have to share? In user voice. Yeah, there's, I don't know if one of you can find the link to that, but yeah, Susan, that is, there are a lot of requests around Whiteboard. A lot of people using Teams say, why can't this be a shared? You forced Wiki as a tab upon us, but why can't you give us something actually useful like the Whiteboard as an automatic tab? I'd be all for an automatic tab within a new team that's created. Your workaround for that, Susan, is a shared one note, which typically update in real time. So you can actually achieve the equivalent right now without specifically Whiteboard. Right. But if you're running a meeting and always you share the screen and do some live editing on there, people want to be able to have the co-editing multiple things moving around with a little of their name or their initials or something around who's doing the edits. So yeah, there's a lot of talk around that. There's stuff out in user voice. I don't know timeframe for this, but you know. Third party apps too. There's two of them, freehand and code by Vivani that do it. There's a lot of movement happening around that. So a lot of people asking for that. Well guys, it's been fun. I got to drop off. I guess it's shoken in now, right? Sean's leaving. I'll just, we're just saving up all the homework assignments for him. Yeah, that's the danger of dropping early. Oh, it was an active last 15 minutes. You've got 14 assignments. Yeah, funny how that works. Yeah. Well, we got through what? 12 questions in the first hour and we need to get through another 20 in the last 15 minutes. So that will lead to a lot of assignments. Yeah, see where this is going. Have a good rest of the day, guys. Hey, thanks a lot. Thanks, Sean. All right, so number 13, Robin. I just want to verify a few things before migrating our email system. I hope you'll help me clear up these questions in my mind. One, do I need to remove DMARC, DKIM and SPF records before adding additional DNS records for Microsoft 365 Exchange? No. No. Huh? And if so, can I delete those records and add them again just in case we're going to revert in our previous email system? So. See, reference previous answer, please. All's the above. No, those records do not need to, you don't need to do anything with those. 365 is smart enough, don't worry about them. Okay. Let's see, Luca asks, can I recover and download the files attached to a group chat? I need to import the documents added from the user to the chat in another program. So you're having a chat, people have added a bunch of attachments to that chat. Is there a way to mass download those items? Anything you put into a chat, doesn't it go into the files for the team? Not for a chat necessarily. Oh, I thought it automatically got added. Or a front-end discussion, that's for a conversation. Yeah. Oh, I thought of that when you were doing it in a group, it automatically got added on the files. I go, okay, I'm wrong. Yeah, no, anything that happens within a chat is personal, it's separate from all the rules that apply to a threaded discussion, the chat over in a channel. And then the answer is no. Yeah, it would be one by one. Right, I'm not aware of anything else. You also can't share, within a chat, you can't share content from a channel. You have to upload it directly from your PC. Now, see, that's different than Slack, because Slack you can actually share from a channel to a private chat, and from a private chat to a channel, as long as you give permissions, so. Yeah, what would be, Eric, any thoughts on what's the, kind of the governance, the thinking, the security thinking around not allowing that sharing to happen between chat and channel conversations? Well, I mean, there's a bunch. So all of that was put in place long before the, I mean, from an architecture perspective, all that was put in place long before the private channels existed. So people were using chat, sort of in place of private channels, sometimes without knowing, and other times doing it intentionally. So it was intended to share information one to one, which was not previously shared through any other mechanism. My guess is as they start to make changes, that's not one that needs to be done urgently, obviously, because you're just, yeah, you would, if I was chatting with you, Christian, I would send you something and then I would send it to the group elsewhere, if it was for public distribution. So I think it was really just a privacy type of issue initially, and that'll change in time, because it is a pain. If I go to share something with you, I have to do it intentionally independently from my PC, and then send it to you. So if I didn't have the original file or it was sitting in a conversation somewhere and I wanted to comment on it with you, I wouldn't be able to share that. I'd have to download it and then re-upload it, which is just defeating the purpose. Well, but as the initiator of a chat, if I had the ability to not allow, maybe by default allows for sharing, but I could toggle off and not allow anything that is shared uploaded into a chat anywhere, and control it that way. But most things, if you and I are having a conversation and we're editing something and it's ready for prime time, we've kind of moved through the idea formation and we're ready to share it over in that channel discussion, why wouldn't you be able to just do move that across? Other than the fact that it's located, the content itself, is it a place that is a private channel, a personal one drive or something, and I don't want people co-editing or the permissions are just different from that location than where the content will reside within that channel. Right, but the bigger issue is what is the discussion, right? So if you and I are chatting, I mean, it comes down to governance of what people are using chat for. The idea behind chat is to have, in my humble opinion, quick sidebars that have nothing to do with anything at a project level or to business level, which invites you somewhere else. Hey, Christian, do you have five minutes? Let's go into it. Let's go talk about this client. And therefore, all the information is independent of a particular channel or a particular client. As soon as you're talking about, it's like email, right? You write an email just between you and I, we can go back and forth a hundred times before we talk about a specific client. But once we're talking about a client, you want information that's going to be referenceable and threaded and contextual within the context of that specific client. Maybe, except for when Sean, Mike, Hal and I talk about you specifically, we don't want, we wanna have that conversation and then we have the attachments that eventually we might wanna have public, but not the conversations. No, but to your point, like I get that, the sidebar conversations, but from the attachments, I look at differently than the conversations, the chat conversations. I think there's a reason why you peel off and go have a sidebar conversation because you don't want it to be part of that historical record, it might not be relevant, might be more personal stuff, where we're talking about Sean directly and Mike and Hal and you and I, just like we do every week. This is all being recorded though, so it's kind of all for naught when you think of it, but anyway. But the documentation itself, again, it might be that we go through several iterations, the two of us, and then just wanna easily move that over. So it's just an additional step of having to save that down and then re-upload that, but the difference there is that it then becomes where when you upload that new, that public version, that version one or the pilot plan or whatever that is over in that other location, then you just need to go in and do I need to now delete it from that my personal OneDrive, which is what I was sharing and what we were collaborating on before. So it can add to some duplication of that content, but it does enforce that the content is where it's supposed to be managed properly by having that separation, right? Correct. I had the call that I got off before I jumped in here was with a government client and they were asking all kinds of questions about Microsoft Teams and how I should write in under an alias, let's say Sean McDonough and ask this question, but the question was all about Freedom of Information Act requests. So the ability for anybody in the general public to pull a government agency and say, well, what's all the reference for information pertaining to this specific issue? And they're asking questions around, well, can you, is anything that's written into a channel, Freedom of Information Act accessible? And then what about a chat? And then what about a stream recording? Because a stream recording is gonna spit out a transcript. And does that become a matter of public record? And from that perspective, it's messy, right? Because the easiest thing to say is, yeah, it's all FOI accessible. And then their question is, well, if that's the case, then how do we communicate otherwise? And my answer is I'm not answering that question, communicate any way that you want otherwise. But if you're using Teams, based on where the information is going, whether it's going into SharePoint or whether it's going into a chat file somewhere, all the information lives and exists. So if you're worried about an FOI, then you need to create your own workaround. Well, this kind of goes into a question we answered last week or week before last about Compliance Center and whether in chats, whether they're searchable. And what we had kind of discussed was the fact that an admin can't go in and look at the content of, like I can't go in there and say, as your admin, Eric, I'm gonna go check out like the last 10 conversations, the chats that you have with the 10 people within Teams. It's not, I can't look at it that way. However, because you are an employee and this is a company asset, this system and the conversations that are happening on company property, this environment, and this is where that FOIA request would come in, I would look, it's all searchable. I can go in as an administrator and do a search on intellectual property at certain keywords. And from that, you would be able to find conversations that are happening within chat. I can't just go in and find like a database around that, but I can go in and find references to and conversations that are happening that way. So it's, the lines are kind of blurred for that privacy and as far as access to the content. But the rule of thumb should be that if I'm on my company's Microsoft 365 environment anywhere, I don't own that content or that conversation. That's the way I look at it. There is no privacy to any of that. It might be more difficult for the administrator to get to some of that content, but all of it's accessible. Yeah, not an incorrect way of looking at it, but if you're the X, right? If you're the CEO, the VP, whatever, that's not the way you think about it. That's not how you communicate. If you are someone whose world is going to be upended by an FOI request, then that's how you look at it. You say, well, anything that I do or touch, it's like, I don't know, recording something and having to live forever. Anything that we say here is referenceable. But if we end the recording and talk about something and then restart the recording, then did that conversation really happen? Who knows? Yeah. Answer your phone, Fletch. I don't think, I don't think how I got the Fletch reference. And Mike is busy doing some sort of surgery there. So. Yes, that's right. I apologize. I got an emergency email, so I was responding. Sorry. Well, we might, well, one more, possibly two more questions here. And Eric and I might be able to field these. Susan asked another question. So with an E3 license, a Microsoft 365 talk about teams, can I release an app in Teams for only for one of my teams? Any PowerShell or such, or as in the admin console, I can only release for all. Sorry, you lost me there with the apps and the adding. Yeah. So if I can, what the whole thrust of the question? Yeah. Now the, so the. I just want to make sure I understand the question so I answer it correctly. So the issue is that when you, as an admin for teams over your organization and you allow an app to be used, you can't, you know, can you restrict it to one team or do all teams get it or no teams get it? Right. Can you take it back? Well, so can you limit the apps in a specific team? And my understanding is, how would I answer that is, well, that's up to each of the teams, the team owners. You know, let's say you have, let's simplify in your organization, 10 teams and 10 different people own each of those teams. The admin, the Microsoft 365 admin allows the app in, but the team owner can elect to allow that app to be used within their team or not. Yeah, that sounds about right. And so you just, is it more of a moderator versus a control? Well, first of all, apps are at the channel level, not necessarily the team level. So you can decide and define based on the channel who has access and who doesn't. Now, if the question is within the channel, within the app, who can use it at that level? That's something I have to get some homework done and around and get an answer to. So you're signing up for some homework then, Eric? Sean actually raised his hand, I saw it. Yeah. Yeah, because that's- That's a good question. I don't know the answer. I mean, so I believe, and I'll go back and look at it, but I thought that was, it isn't all or nothing, it's enabled or it's not. And then you have to do that channel management, that community management aspect of it to police it, whether you allow it to be part of the collaborative activities within that team and those channels. That's my understanding, but Sean will go and clarify for us, mark that one down as a Sean assignment. Thank you, Eric. Sean assigned homework to investigate. I'm going to mark this. Look, Mike looks all focused and all of a sudden, he gets this smirk and he looks up and nods. Yeah. Right. Number 16, rupee123. Windows hangs randomly and touchpad freezes. So my windows 10 is hanging randomly for every half an hour. The touchpad also hangs for some second and becomes normal. My system has clean windows, 8GB, 512 SSD purchased just 10 days ago. Any idea why that might hang? A lemon of a laptop? Lots of ideas. There's just a whole bunch of things that could be involved with there. How hot is it? Seriously, that's one of the things that these surfaces that I've got to do. If they get too hot, there is a throttle. There's a processor throttle. And that's why I've got this little lovely fan blowing on the back of the machine while I'm sitting here doing this because there is enough activity in running it. And they blame me for having some sort of background. I don't know. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I didn't want to interrupt that, but the point being is I've had teams completely crash on me when the machine gets hot enough. So I mean, that's one of the positive things. I've had teams crash on me as nothing could do without the machine. That's a totally different question. Well, yeah, that's true. That's true. Yeah, there's a million things that you could check there. I mean, that's not a terribly powerful machine to begin with, but it certainly it shouldn't just hang for endless periods of time. I would check things like one drive. Do you have one drive sync happening and how much content is it syncing at a time or how much information are you editing? Pull task manager up and leave it on the screen and see what it does. Well, and saying that you've got a gig of RAM and that 512 hard drive has nothing to do it could be an old processor and machine, but same thing, if you've got a dozen things that are open. The touchpad not responding. I mean, all of that kind of points to a memory issue. So if you have 20 Chrome tabs open and teams running, there you go. Guys, I got a hop here. Yeah, we're at the time anyway. So thanks a lot, Eric and appreciate everybody for joining. This was episode 26. I didn't mention that at the beginning. Episode 26. I know. So we will not be back tonight, but you can continue to ask questions, send them to officehoursatcollabtalk.com and we'll address them. Otherwise, we're picking up questions from the Facebook groups, the Office 365 community as well as the Microsoft Teams community out on Facebook. And you can find this recording out on YouTube under your YouTube's WACC Collab Talk. So my company page just go look for office hours and as well as on buckleyplanet.com and I provide a complete link list of every topic that we cover in order so that you can go in and jump to that part of the video. So we're now at this every week, every Monday morning at 8 a.m. Pacific. So we'll see you back next week and thank you gentlemen and I'll be, I believe I'll be here for this because I head out to the North American Collab Summit I think Monday afternoon. So I'll be there in person. My only other, my last event in person event was in February so I'm looking forward to going out to Missouri. So, all right gentlemen, thanks a lot. We'll talk to you soon. Bye. Thanks. Bye. Yep.