Audio Conferencing
12 TopicsAudio Conferencing Add-on Requirements
Hello Everyone, We have E1 Office365 subscriptions. We would like to add Audio Conferencing to a few of our users. The MS tech who answered our inquiry about an error we receive when trying to set up audio conf services for a test user, says that we also need to purchase Phone system licenses for all Audio Conferencing users. We can't find any mention of this. Can anyone confirm this one way or the other? Thank you!!3KViews1like1CommentTeams Rooms Limitations
I set up 2 Teams Rooms for one of my clients and in learning how to set up and use a Teams Room and train the client, there seems to be a LOT left to be desired with Teams Room, especially for the price of the Teams Room Pro license! The Teams Room includes an Audio Conference license, but if you want to use it you have to send the invite AS the room. So users needing this would need to be a delegated admin of the room resource. And who wants to send out an invite from "Main Conference Room on behalf of Jane" to their customers? This means each user needs their own Audio Conference license* to send out their own invites and then add the Teams room. What is the point of the room having an audio conference license? If you add a Teams Room to your invite, the attendees are shown the location of the meeting as that conference room, the only clue it is an online/teams meeting is the Teams info in the invite's message body. Then when the attendee gets an Outlook reminder for the meeting it actually shows the location as the conference room NOT a Teams meeting. No minutes are included so you can't actually use the Teams Room as a conference phone unless you add minutes. I would think for the cost of Teams Room Pro it would include a Teams Phone with Calling Plan license. So if you just want to have a conference call you have to setup a whole Teams meeting and then just use the audio portion. This has been a very difficult journey. Explaining all of this to my client after convincing them to spend a good amount of money on a Teams Room setup (equipment cost, to be fair, is not a Microsoft problem) and then continually telling them the limitations and how they need to spend more money for additional licenses to get the features they want is not a good solution. For those looking to sell a Teams Room, do the research first and be warned it is NOT a cheap or easy solution! *Thankfully the Audio Conference license is now free, that's a big thank you out to Microsoft for that!2KViews1like1CommentMicrosoft 365 Audio Conferencing - turn off "call me"
For Teams users that want to have people be able to use a phone call for audio instead of using the PC audio, we have Microsoft 365 Audio Conferencing Licenses. If a person with this license schedules a meeting, there's a Phone Audio option where there's an option to "Call Me" and they enter their preferred phone number and Teams makes a call to that person for their audio. We would like to turn this option off so that people in Teams meetings have to call in themselves, rather than have the "Call me" so that Teams initiates the call. I believe I've found two ways to individually turn this off: 1) I can go to the Teams Admin Center, Users, open the User, and under Account, Audio Conferencing, I think I can change "Dial-out permission" to "Don't allow." 2) I think I can use a powershell command like the following to turn it off per person: Grant-CsDialoutPolicy -identity “john-smith@fami.com” -PolicyName "DialoutCPCandPSTNDisabled" Does anyone know if these options are correct? And is there an option to globally turn this off for all employees?Solved14KViews1like2CommentsDuring a live event, is there a way for attendees to call into the audio conference number
I noticed that during live events that when someone calls into a audio conference number, they are marked as presenter on the producer screen... is there not a way for attendees to call in?26KViews1like2Comments