Apr 05 2020 01:01 AM
Jun 18 2020 11:27 AM
Jul 28 2020 09:50 AM
@FTravinsky @Robertlee
This worked for us. It was not difficult. I was nervous about using Power Shell for the first time to create the rules, but it went off fairly easily. I used "username.outlook@domain.com" for my alias.
Jul 29 2020 03:44 AM
Jul 29 2020 03:50 AM
@Darshana_Punekar , Yeap.
You will receive e-mails with meeting invitations in Outlook and they immideately show up in Outlook Calendar as proposed/tentative event.
Jul 29 2020 03:53 AM
Jul 29 2020 04:14 AM
Sep 14 2020 08:23 PM
@FTravinsky curious to find out more on steps 2 and 3. Would like to document this for other users as a step-by-step process on how its working. Are you able to share some screenshots I can test and expand on for the community please?
Sep 15 2020 02:00 AM
@LanceH , as all the changes are made globally, server-side, there's no need for end-user manuals.
Nevertheless, here's how-to for newbie Admins:
1. https://admin.google.com, Domains - Add a domain alias, like mail.yourdomain.com:
2. https://outlook.office365.com/ecp/, Open up Exchange Online PowerShell and fire a script from the previous post:
Dec 11 2020 09:10 AM
@FTravinsky Thanks for a fun solution ;)
What about different top domains, how would you go about then with the script?
And also receiving responses to Teams invitations to see if the participants have accepted or declined, something that is not solvable I presume? Google Workplace is the receiver of the organizer emails being sent by Teams.
Mar 03 2021 03:27 AM
Thanks for the solution, but i have an additional problem.
The powerShell scripts fail adding more than 100 rules. It complains about the maximum number of recipients can go beyond 100.
Is there anywhere I could increase that limit. I've been looking but no luck.
Thanks
Mar 03 2021 03:47 AM
Jun 09 2021 06:33 AM
Jun 16 2021 02:07 AM
Jun 16 2021 10:05 AM