Community Update #2
Published Apr 14 2017 01:08 PM 13.4K Views
Microsoft

Don’t tell anyone, blog readers, but I’m technically a Millennial. I’m right on the edge, but I was indeed born narrowly after the release of E.T. And despite that I’m a mom, homeowner, and corporate employee, my maturity and life choices cannot hide the fact that I had to be told who Bob Hope was.

Our amazing Teams designer (and Millennial!) Sariah Swick illustrated this adorable ET in solidarity of Millennials at Teams.Our amazing Teams designer (and Millennial!) Sariah Swick illustrated this adorable ET in solidarity of Millennials at Teams.

 

That’s why I really appreciated this post from a young Teams fan based in Richmond, Virginia, admitting that he is a veteran to technology but new to enterprise office technology. His name is Nathan Budryk and he’s a brand new hire at AvePoint, an ISV with expertise in the Microsoft Cloud.

 

Nathan points out the ways that Teams incorporates normalized social media behaviors into the product, such as using the “@” symbol to mention someone and the inclusion of GIFs and customizable memes. This eases his overall transition into cloud technology, as well as a Millennial entering the corporate environment.

 

Nathan and his Millennial peers at the AvePoint office in Richmond, Virginia. They are standing in the office indoor basketball court because AvePoint is a cool place to work.Nathan and his Millennial peers at the AvePoint office in Richmond, Virginia. They are standing in the office indoor basketball court because AvePoint is a cool place to work.If you know sub-30 Teams users, please pass this along to them. And if you’re a Millennial reading this, please lend your thoughts in the comments section.

 

And Nathan: keep us posted on your cloud journey!

 

Weekend reading recommendation #1 – Teams Tips from a Millennial

 

Read Nathan's post here: https://t.co/ADf77CcpYH

  

Weekend reading recommendation #2 – Recover deleted Teams

 

We’ve worked with the Office 365 Groups team so that now, whenever you delete a team, you'll have the option of recovering it for up to 30 days. That means team owners or IT admins will be able to bring back your entire team (including all team members, team content, tabs, and chat history) even after they've been deleted.

 

If you delete a team from the Teams app or a group from OWA, and restore using PowerShell within 30 days – everything (channels, files, tabs, etc.) will reappear as it was before. It will take about 1-4 hours to restore. Restoring a team is simple, just follow the instructions here: https://aka.ms/groupssoftdelete

 

Enjoy your weekend everyone!

Suphatra

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