In addition, the feature relied on having the Manager attribute properly configured in AD/Exchange Online, which isn’t always the case. Still, people have been using these settings and were caught off guard by their removal, as evident for example from this thread on the MTC. Then again, in larger teams they could contribute to creating a “calendar bloat”, or create confusion in situations where the permissions didn’t match the intended use case for this feature. What we’ve lost is access to these two toggles, which made the process that much easier. In all fairness, we haven’t lost the functionality to actually open the Calendars of any of our peers or direct reports, provided the corresponding permissions allow it. The feature itself doesn’t perform any changes (or checks) on the permissions on those calendars. Under the calendar group, the individual calendars of each member of the team will be listed, up to a number of 100, allowing you to quickly select each on all of them, when needed. Once you toggle the settings, a new “group” will appear on the left pane, prefixed with “Team:” and featuring the name of the manager (or your name in case of direct reports). From the dropdown menu, you can manage your Calendar groups, or toggle the built-in options to Show Manager’s Team Calendars and/or Show Team Calendars. To access said Calendar Groups, one would navigate to the Calendar pane in Outlook (Ctrl+2), select Home on the Ribbon, look for the Manage Calendars group in the middle and press the Calendar Groups button. While the semi-annual channel builds still feature these two functionalities, anyone using a current channel build will no longer have access to them.įor those of you that aren’t familiar with this functionality, here’s the two sentence breakdown. This time around, the impacted functionalities are the Team’s and Manager’s Calendar Groups in Outlook, or in other words the ability to quickly access all your direct reports’ or peers’ Calendars. If you want early access to new releases, join the Office Insider program.ĭownload links are only provided for the most recent releases.In their never-ending quest to dumb down Outlook’s interface, the folks at Microsoft has decided to get rid of yet another feature.For information about the features, security updates, and non-security updates that are included in a given release of Office for Mac, see Release notes for Office for Mac.For information about Office 2016 for Mac releases from September onward, see Release notes for Office 2016 for Mac You can’t activate version 16.17 or later with an Office 2016 for Mac volume license. Older versions up to and including 16.16 can be activated with an Office 2016 for Mac volume license. The update history information for version 16.16 and earlier also applies to Office 2016 for Mac, which is also a version of Office for Mac that’s available as a one-time purchase.Starting with the 16.17 release in September 2018, this information also applies to Office 2019 for Mac, which is a version of Office for Mac that’s available as a one-time purchase from a retail store or through a volume licensing agreement.For security reason, Microsoft has deprecated the use of SHA-1. For more information, see Microsoft Teams installations on a Mac. Starting with Version 16.21, Microsoft Teams will be installed by default for new installations if you're using the Office suite install package.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |