![]() If an organization is already a Microsoft 365/ Office 365 customer, it is quite possible that users are already using Microsoft Teams for other collaboration efforts. IT system administrators and staff should be canvassing their end users to verify they are indeed on Microsoft Teams and off Skype for Business Online to prevent any loss of service. There are less than three weeks until Skype for Business Online goes offline. If you haven’t done so already, start now. When Should I Migrate from Skype for Business Online to Microsoft Teams? Skype for Business Server 2019 will be supported by Microsoft until October 14, 2025. ![]() Two years ago, Microsoft released Skype for Business Server 2019 and recommends that customers upgrade to this version for their on-premises communications needs. Note: The Skype for Business Online end of life does not impact organizations utilizing Skype for Business Server on-premises. Who Will This impact?Ĭustomers that were using Skype for Business Online prior to September 2019 and have already performed their own migration to Microsoft Teams should see no change in service when Skype for Business Online goes dark at the end of the month.įor any other users on Skype for Business Online for whatever reason, will need to migrate to Microsoft Teams before July 31 or face losing communications capability.įrom September 2019, any new Microsoft 365/Office 365 customers were directly onboarded into Microsoft Teams for all their chat and calling communications, so most customers that have joined since that time frame should already be on Microsoft Teams. ![]() Here are answers to some of the most pressing questions around this transition. That Skype for Business Online is sunsetting isn’t news – the company’s been very open about this since 2019 – but it still may affect enterprise IT pros as the service goes away. On July 31, Microsoft will pull the plug on the online conferencing space that was a precursor to Teams. ![]() Oh, apparently the good news don’t stop here – the SharePoint Online PowerShell module also has ADAL support now.Say goodbye to Skype for Business Online. You can download the new version (.0 or 7.0.0.0 as reported via PowerShell) from the Microsoft Download Center here: With that, there’s practically no excuse to not have some form of MFA enabled for all you tenant admins. You will be connected and the SfB Online cmdlets downloaded. The familiar dialog will popup and after entering the password, you will have to perform the second-factor authentication, in this case Azure MFA:Īnd pretty much that’s it. The difference is that instead of passing a Credentials object, you can use the New-CsOnlineSession with just the username to trigger the ADAL flow: New-CsOnlineSession -UserName the scenes, this will fire up the Get-CsAccessToken cmdlet to obtain the token from Azure AD. Finally!Ĭonnecting to SfB Online PowerShell works as before, you need to use the New-CsOnlineSession to create a session, then use the Import-PSSession to download all the cmdlets. Short, but important – a new version of the Skype for Business PowerShell module has been released, which brings support for ADAL.
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