Jan 13 2021 05:03 AM - edited Jan 13 2021 10:52 AM
Feb 21 2021 12:33 PM
@IanMurphy48 wrote:
It is *extremely* likely that a specific build would cause the issues I describe. Its called a bug.
However this forum isn't full of people reporting the exact same issue, and from your description no one is going to live with Teams crashing constantly. Microsoft also wouldn't leave people on a version with such an issue when they have newer versions either would they?
Feb 21 2021 12:54 PM
By any chance is it a Lenovo L13 Laptop like mentioned over here
My Laptop shuts down during TEAMS calls - Microsoft Tech Community
May 31 2021 01:23 AM
@ChristianBergstrom WhatPulse appears to be switching to a subscription model. Microsoft Teams - Wikipedia lists a recent version, although I'm not sure that it is as up-to-date as WhatPulse. Do you know of another way of listing the latest version in circulation?
Regards,
Pete.
May 31 2021 02:00 AM
May 31 2021 02:11 AM
@ChristianJBergstrom Thanks for the response. Yes Google, not quite the usual fountain of knowledge where Teams version information is concerned 🙂 I've found the update process to be pretty flaky from a 'will it, won't it upgrade' point-of-view. Although if it decides to it seems to be ok. Ah well, hopefully Wikipedia will keep updating the stable version info.
Thanks again.
Regards,
Pete.
May 31 2021 02:29 AM
May 31 2021 04:05 AM
@StevenC365 Given the long history of MS doing precisely that, my answer is a resounding yes. MS fixes bugs which affect a lot of people or which create a lot of noise. I changed nothing, but the Teams issue disappeared a few weeks later, without so much as a reboot (I rarely reboot)... so, yes, it was a teams bug fixed by a Teams update.... why couldn't I just have installed the latest version? Ah, yes, because the latest version is never available for download.
I currently have an issue at a client who is running office 2010 (still). All of a sudden some users have the Teams Icon in outlook, despite that not being supported in 2010. Some users, but not all, and I can't download the same version for everyone, so some people have the icon, some don't. Those that don't have it of course want to know why their neighbour is able to organise meetings from Outlook and they can't. All online help still says that this functionality does't exist.
Isn't this release policy just great...
Jun 07 2021 04:36 AM - edited Jun 07 2021 04:40 AM
@pleeman@IanMurphy48: There seems to be an alternative: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ItzLevvie/MicrosoftTeams-msinternal/master/defconfig
Here's what these channels mean: https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/microsoft-teams-blog/launch-of-microsoft-teams-preview-experi...
Jun 07 2021 06:37 AM
Aug 04 2022 05:58 PM
Hi Christian
I have the update loop problem and was reading your post - it mentions to copy the latest version in the link below and hit enter - cant see the link to paste it in?
Thanks
Howard
Aug 05 2022 12:23 AM
@brendan1000 Hey, the conversation is quite old so some links have been terminated. But you can simply go via this for example https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ItzLevvie/MicrosoftTeams-msinternal/master/defconfig and copy one of them to your browser.
Bear in mind this isn't an official way of updating the Teams client but rather to force an installation of another version. From my experience you'll return to your standard update ring after the automatic update interval has been triggered as explained here Teams updates - Microsoft Teams | Microsoft Docs
But for now and for testing purpose go for it.
Aug 16 2022 07:52 AM
@ChristianBergstrom
Microsoft already has an option to retrieve the last version available, on the link
https://teams.microsoft.com/desktopclient/installer/windows/x64
Actually, the last version available is.
https://statics.teams.cdn.office.net/production-windows-x64/1.5.00.21463/Teams_windows_x64.exe
You can use a bat script to get the package download link and from that, you can do whatever you want to.
SET "TeamsURL= curl.exe "https://teams.microsoft.com/desktopclient/installer/windows/x64"-s"
FOR /F %%R IN ('%TeamsURL%') DO ( SET LINK=%%R )
ECHO %LINK%
pause
Aug 16 2022 08:12 AM
@Jackson_F_Silva this is excellent, thanks.
Powershell equivalent is:
Invoke-WebRequest -Uri "https://teams.microsoft.com/desktopclient/installer/windows/x64" | Select-Object -ExpandProperty Content
Aug 16 2022 08:18 AM
@Jackson_F_Silva Fair enough. But the above reply was simply an alternative option for installing different versions in troubleshooting purpose, and not necessarily having the latest production build. There are differences when it comes to the update rings and the update process is quite complex, at least I think so.
Aug 16 2022 03:28 PM - edited Aug 19 2022 06:12 AM
@Jackson_F_Silva Yes but lacks Electron 16 builds which is quite useful on Windows as Electron 16 has a performance boost
Currently https://teams.microsoft.com/desktopclient/installer/windows/x64 points to Electron 10 builds and https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ItzLevvie/MicrosoftTeams-msinternal/master/defconfig already has Electron 16 builds under the exploration section.
Dec 31 2022 08:59 AM
I would like to know if the latest version listed on "https://whatpulse.org/app/microsoft-teams" refers to the stable or unstable version.
I have tried to download the latest version for macOS following the instructions by modifying the link to "https://statics.teams.cdn.office.net/production-osx/1.3.00.33971/Teams_osx.pkg", where I have changed the number "1.3.00.33971" to the number on "https://whatpulse.org/app/microsoft-teams". I got an error message.
Then I started looking for where to download the latest macOS version, and found that if I type "https://teams.microsoft.com/desktopclient/installer/windows/x64" into the browser and then press Enter, it prints the link to the latest Windows x64 version. But this version number does not match the latest version number listed on "https://whatpulse.org/app/microsoft-teams". Here is an older Teams version number. While you can follow the instructions to download the newer version.
Similarly, I tried typing the link "https://teams.microsoft.com/desktopclient/installer/osx" into the browser, and after pressing Enter, it printed the latest macOS version, which also does not match the version on "https://whatpulse.org/app/microsoft-teams". In addition, the version number on page "https://whatpulse.org/app/microsoft-teams" starts with "1.00...", and on page "https://teams.microsoft.com/desktopclient/installer/osx", the number in the link ("https://statics.teams.cdn.office.net/production-osx/1.5.00.33356/Teams_osx.pkg") starts with "1.5.00"
From the link, you can see that the latest macOS version is 1.5.00.3356, but I was able to download version 1.5.00.33364 by typing in this link "https://statics.teams.cdn.office.net/production-osx/1.5.00.33364/Teams_osx.pkg"
So I don't understand which is the latest version.
Is it possible to update the program without anyone logged in? Because I want to install/update the new versions on machines that are used by more people (teachers and students).
I have translated this text using the website "https://www.deepl.com/translator" as I don't know English that well. I speak Hungarian. I hope everything is understandable despite the translation.
Jan 04 2023 12:31 AM