The Skype for Business user will receive an invite to join the meeting. Users in Teams will see the “ Start sharing your screen” icon, they will be prompted to start an ad-hoc meeting with that user as shown here. However, users can share their screen in a Teams meeting. This is arguably one of the biggest current limitations.
MICROSOFT LYNC SHARE SCREEN HOW TO
Significant limitations I see end-users experiencing, and how to work around Currently (October 2019) here the two most Teams and SfB interop is evolving all the time, so be sure to checkīack regularly if you have a question about a specific feature. Microsoft Teams and Skype for Business coexistence and interoperability. But what are these feature limitations? The limitations are documented deep in this What the notification is warning the SfB user about. In this scenario are there are a few feature limitations, and this is This scenario is not as native interop (interoperability). Both users are in the same organization, and The other user is in the Teams Only mode. The Sfb user is in Skype for Business only coexistence mode, and What is happening in this scenario is that the Skype for Business
I often get questions from a Skype for Business user when they get the notification shown below in their client (which occurs when they are trying to communicate with another user who is using Teams and is in the “Teams Only” coexistence mode). Level which takes precedent if there is no Teams Upgrade policy applied to the
There is a global Teams Upgrade policy defined at the tenant Using Skype for Business largely depends on what coexistenceĬoexistence mode is set in a Teams Upgrade policy which applies to the The experience of one user using Microsoft Teams, and another user Of Microsoft Teams and Skype for Business usage. Skype for Business, there are more users in those organizations that have a mix With more organizations adopting Microsoft teams and upgrading from