Wictor Wilen

Wictor Wilén is Product Leader at Microsoft. Former Microsoft Regional Director and SharePoint MVP, as well as an author and a well known international speaker

Office 365

What's new on the Office Roadmap - 2015-08-12

We have updates, and quite a few of them, to the Office Roadmap. Some clean up, some awesome Visio features rolling out and a set of new features in the In Development segment. Also noticeable quite a few of the “refresh” features and one cancelled item. Changes 2015-08-12 Now Launched NDR backscatter protection: has been rolling out for a while Office 365 Admin Center June Updates: the June stuff is launched Office 365 Store: launched. Verdict from customers - why does it have to be there, can’t we remove it? Office Online Edit in Yammer: Really dump feature that allows users to edit documents in Yammer - documents should never ever be stored in Yammer to start with! Public Folders: adding and removing favorites in OWA: Public folders? Didn’t someone say they were to be removed :) Rolling out Adding IRM protection to Visio file: sweet feature that now is rolling out and allows to protect your most important files. Coming from In Development Create and collaboration on Visio diagrams using Office like experience: more of them Visio goodies rolling out DKIM Outbound for Exchange Online Protection: better protection in ExO by digitally signed message headers Getting started experience in Visio: Visio, nuff said Office 365 Domain Purchase Experience: from in development Office 365 Settings pane: the third “pane” to be rolled out (Help, Notification and Settings). I just wonder when we are allowed to hook into these? Office 365 User Purchases: just buy it yourself if your IT department says no. From in development. Office 365 Video Embed: I don’t know about you but I’m getting confused. Rolling out, Launched, Rolling out… Purchase & Subscriptions Experience Refresh: a new user experience for the purchase and subscriptions pages are rolling out. Personally I had hard to find what I needed… Rapid data connectivity in Visio: Now, if only everyone had access to Visio Refreshed stencils and smart shapes in Visio: Metro? From In Development. Search Refiners in Outlook Web App: make it easier to find your stuff using refiners in OWA Search Suggestions in Outlook Web App: more OWA search goodness In Development Auto-Expanding Archives: new item on the roadmap that allows archives to automatically expand as needed. No mention of any specific service but I guess it is an Exchange Online thing :) Major update to Outlook Web App: Outlook Web App, or should I say Outlook on the web, will have major UX update coming (new) Mobile PDF annotation support for iOS: offline access and PDF editing support on iOS - those fruit fone users get all the fun… (new) Office 365 Admin app updates: focus this month is on… GROUPS! I’ve said it before - Groups is the future folks! (new) Office 365 app launcher refresh: New on the list! App launcher will be more like the Windows 10 Start menu with different sized tiles. Save to OneDrive for Business in Outlook for iOS and Android: new on the roadmap, wonder if these things get added to the Modern Mail client in Windows 10 (phone)? Subscription Management Experience refresh: even more modern design I presume… (new) Supervisory Review for financial and regulatory compliance: Wow, really cool and scary. This feature will allow auditors to look into a subset of users communications. (new) Uservoice coming to Outlook on the web: a link directly in OWA, sorry Outlook on the web, so users can give feedback to the OWA, sorry Outlook on the web, team. Cancelled Evolving the Outlook Web App options page: added in April, but no info on why this is cancelled Moved off the list into the Previously released Azure AD Reports Disable OneDrive for Business sync for unmanaged PCs Exchange Online Advanced Threat Protection MDM for OneDrive for Business Mobile device management Office 365 Groups: Dynamic CRM integration Office 365 Groups: files improvement Office 365 Groups: improving visibility and management Office 365 Groups: adding Like to Conversations Office 365 services hosted in Microsoft Australia datacenters Office Online Preview in Yammer Quarantine Message Body Preview Skype for Business Online Unified OneDrive API

Office 365

Take control of your Office 365 Theme!

It has been a while since Office 365 introduced the suite wide themes. These themes are applied on all services within the Office 365 suite, or at least the ones using the Suite Bar navigation. Up until the very last few weeks the suite wide theme has been something you can set but your SharePoint site owners and all end-users has been able to override them. Finally these things has been resolved and fixed (no info about this on the Office Roadmap, hence this blog post)!

Office 365

Office 365 Groups for Admins - simple reporting using PowerShell

In this post, in the Office 365 Groups for Admins series, I will leverage what we learned in the previous posts, combine it with some PowerShell magic and create some basic reports. You can use these reports as a base for your Office 365 Groups reporting in your organization. Note: all these reports require that you have connected to your Exchange Online tenant with appropriate permissions, see this post about more details.

Office 365

Office 365 Groups for Admins

As you might have noticed I’m a big fan of Office 365 Groups, aka Unified Groups. I do think they will play a major role in the future of Office 365 Collaboration. Office 365 Groups consists of many moving parts, some that are half baked, some that are not working at all and some that is a bit difficult to understand. In this series of posts, will be published over the next few weeks and after that when needed, I will describe how you as an Office 365 Admin can and should work with Office 365 Groups.

Office 365

Office 365 Groups for Admins - managing Group memberships with PowerShell

In the last post of the Office 365 Groups for Admins series I showed you how to manage the Unified Groups using PowerShell. Let’s continue on that journey and take a look at how you can manage the Group memberships using PowerShell. All membership management are done using the *-UnifiedGroupLinks cmdlets, you can access them using PowerShell and connecting to Exchange Online as shown in the previous post. The cmdlets is at the moment that well documented. If that changes I’ll make sure to update this post (and please remind me).

Office 365

Office 365 Groups for Admins - managing Groups with PowerShell

One of the loudest complaints I hear from people when we talk about Groups is the lack of management features, so in this post in the Office 365 Groups for Admins series we will take a look at how you can manage your Unified Groups using PowerShell. In the previous post I actually already showed you how to use PowerShell to create Groups, but let’s take a step back. Connecting PowerShell to Exchange Online To start working with the Unified Groups in PowerShell we need to connect to Exchange Online and we do that by establishing a PowerShell session to a specific Uri, see code sample below, and then import that session to our local session. This means we do not have to install any PowerShell module or similar. This is how it should look like:

Office 365

Office 365 Groups for Admins - Creating Groups

In this post of the Office 365 Groups for Admins series we will take a look at how you as an admin and your end-user can create Office 365 Groups. The option to allow end-users to create Unified Groups or not are determined by the Mailbox Policy, as described in a previous post. End-user creation of Office 365 Groups End-users have two ways of creating new Groups; either use the Office 365 web interface or using Outlook 2016 (works on the PC edition, not sure about Office on Macintosh). This is option is by default available for ANYONE within your organization, there is no granularity at all, there is no approval or anything.

Office 365

Office 365 Groups for Admins - Group creation policies

In this post of the Office 365 Groups for Admins series I will talk about the small but important policies we can apply to Group creation. At the moment there is very little control of the actual Office 365 Group creation in Office 365. And this tends to be one really important aspect of the Unified Groups discussion - can we allow them or not? I do hope that I over the time can update this post with new and improved governance features.

Office 365

Office 365 Groups for Admins - Enable and disable user creation of Groups

This is the third post in my Office 365 Groups for Admins series and it will focus on one of the primary tasks an Office 365 Admin has to do once their tenant is up and running; should we allow our users to create Office 365 Groups or not? I’m not going to give you an answer to this. It is something you need to evaluate properly within your organization, but I do recommend that you initially always turn off Groups, so that you can get some governance into the game before promoting it to everyone.

Office 365

Office 365 Groups for Admins - Groups entry points

In this first post of the Office 365 Groups for Admins series I will show you where you have the different entry points for the Unified Groups. It’s important to understand this as it is important in the posts to follow. Office 365 Mail (end users) The first and perhaps the most obvious point of Office 365 Groups is in the Office 365 Mail application (Outlook Web App, OWA). On the left hand side you will see the Groups heading. Under that heading 10 of the Groups you are member of are shown, with your Favorites on top.