by community-syndication | Mar 8, 2013 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
I ‘ve encountered a problem sharing Contacts from within Outlook. We were trying to share a contactgroup where both parties are from the same company, so on the same Office365 license.
However, on trying to send out a share request we stumbled upon following error:
“Problem: Your organization’s policy does not allow you to share with this recipient.”
At first it seemed that there should be anything wrong with the organizations settings made in office365. But nothing strange was configured there… Setting the permissions to the other mail addres did seem to work. What got me questioning there would be anyhting wrong in the configurational settings.
It turned out there was a difference when trying to share the contact or setting the permission. And after realising this, even sharing the contact worked just fine… without changing any of the configuration settings!
Solution
What turned out to be the problem than?
when the user started typing the recipient name in the “To” box of the “Share invitation” dialog, the recipient was picked up by autocompleteion. However, the autocompletion picked up the recipient from the Contacts instead of from the Global Address List. So the name of the recipient appeared as “User Name <
[email protected]>”, where it had to be “
User Name” when you choose from the Global Adress list.
So on sending the email invitation to share the contact list, Microsoft Exchange considered the recipient to be outside the organization. Which resulted in the above error message of course.
by community-syndication | Mar 8, 2013 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
The registration site for the BizTalk Saturday – BizTalk 2013 Hands on Day – Brisbane on Saturday 13th April – is now open
http://www.eventbrite.com.au/event/5679020102
Any question please post a comment
More …
by community-syndication | Mar 8, 2013 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
The registration and info sites for the BizTalk Saturday – BizTalk 2013 Hands on Day – Melbourne, we are having 2 events for Melbourne:
BizTalk Saturday – BizTalk 2013 Hands On Day – Melbourne – Friday 22nd March – http://www.eventbrite.com.au/event/5678855610
BizTalk Saturday – BizTalk 2013 Hands On Day – Melbourne – Saturday 23rd March – http://www.eventbrite.com.au/event/5678923814
Any question please post a comment
More …
by community-syndication | Mar 7, 2013 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
You probably don’t need any introduction about BizTalk Innovation Day and our BizTalk Crew team. But for those of you who don’t know! BizTalk Crew BizTalk Crew was born without any planning nearly 2 years ago consisting of Steef-Jan Wiggers, Saravana Kumar, Nino-Crudele, Sandro Pereira, and Tord Nordahl all Microsoft Integration MVP’s, all specialising in […]
The post BizTalk360 visiting Portugal for Oporto BizTalk Innovation Day appeared first on BizTalk360 Blog.
Blog Post by: Saravana Kumar
by community-syndication | Mar 6, 2013 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
Folks – we’re into week 2 of the 6 weeks of Azure program and as I was planning these
sessions out with Christian last year, I thought I’d like to bring some fun
into the mix.
There’s many possibilities that you can do in Azure, but none other than building
a bit of h/w, programming it & having it talk to Azure! Monitored, controlled
– how good is that.
Enter the FEZ Kits – www.ghielectronics.com
(There’s also the Raspberry PI’s that run a flavour of Linux with a deployment of
Mono – that let’s you run C# code straight onto a $35 computer! – I’ll save that for
another post)
FEZ Kits
These are the ’mans lego’ kit as I like to think of them as.
What makes these kits cool:
-
they run a flavour of .NET – .NET Microframework. So yes you can write C# etc that
runs on the device.
-
you can get many many additional modules for
these to plug into your masterpiece – things like temperature sensors, light sensors,
colour sensors etc.
-
they run off USB power, even a set of 4 AAA batteries would do it.
-
you program them via USB cable from Visual Studio.
-
*rich* community and developer support – http://www.ghielectronics.com/support/.net-micro-framework
FYI – my kit I’ve added to over time and I’ve also got a Raspberry PI that
I play with (good NFC reader).
My FEZ KIT on the left, with the PI on the right in my beautiful Lego box
Now the best thing is that the FEZ Hydra kit (above) will
be available to you (as a prize and the like) on the BOOTCAMPS as part of the 6 weeks
of Azure.
Let me know how you get on and if you’ve got any questions about these guys – they’re
great and good for developers.
— from the official blurb —-
6 Weeks of Azure
Need in-person Azure Training? DevCamps are for you
Register for a DevCamp in Melbourne | Sydney | Brisbane to
learn how to use the new Windows Azure features and services including Windows Azure
Virtual Machines, Web Sites, and Visual Studio 2012 to build and move a variety of
apps to the cloud. You will see how to build web sites, mobile
applications, and enterprise-class applications.
Need help with your app? Register for a Boot Camp
Register for a Boot Camp near you: Melbourne | Sydney | Brisbane. Our
Industry and Microsoft experts will be available to help complete your
Windows Azure app as part of the 6 Weeks of Windows Azure course.
There will be a FEZ Hydra
Kit or two to win not to mention some t-shirts and mice to
giveaway.
6 Weeks
Forum
Blog Post by: Mick Badran
by community-syndication | Mar 6, 2013 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
Recently we tried to make a simple change to a SSIS package and got stuck with this error. After must angst we tracked the problem to the way that the SQL agent running the SSIS package had been configured. Under the logging tab the SSIS log provider had not been specified.
Blog Post by: mbrimble
by community-syndication | Mar 6, 2013 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
It’s a good practice to make static send ports dynamic, by changing the OutboundTransportLocation property in the send pipeline. However, when using this mechanism on WCF send ports, there’s a caveat. Let’s have a look!
by community-syndication | Mar 6, 2013 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
While implementing an EDI exchange using BizTalk Server 2010 I ran into a rather perplexing problem. There was a requirement that the system should be able tosupport any identification qualifiers (in the UNB2.2 / UNB3.2 segments) that our trading partners prescribed, even if they were non-standard values. The grief-inducing scenario was that some of the […]
Blog Post by: Johann
by community-syndication | Mar 5, 2013 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
This post is for the BizTalk Portuguese Community! Oporto BizTalk Innovation Day %u00e9 um evento de um dia focado exclusivamente em Microsoft BizTalk Server e t%u00f3picos relacionados. Ir%u00e1 ocorrer no dia 14 de Mar%u00e7o de 2013 na Ribeira do Porto (Casa do Infante) e contar%u00e1 com a presen%u00e7a de um membro da equipa de produto […]
Blog Post by: Sandro Pereira
by community-syndication | Mar 5, 2013 | BizTalk Community Blogs via Syndication
There has been some news about Windows Azure Active Directory recently. Yesterday an announce has been made about a deeper integration between Windows Azure portal and Windows Azure Active Directory (http://blogs.msdn.com/b/windowsazure/archive/2013/03/04/more-identity-and-access-management-improvements-in-windows-azure.aspx).
I had created a Windows Azure Active Directory standalone tenant a few weeks ago. You can do this yourself; it is available at https://activedirectory.windowsazure.com/Signup/QuickSignup.aspx?ru=https://activedirectory.windowsazure.com/default.aspx&ali=1.
In order to access Windows Azure resources from a Windows Azure Active Directory (from now on WAAD) account, it is possible to go the Windows Azure Management portal (https://manage.windowsazure.com) and connect like an Office 365 user. In this case we’ll see how to create a free subscription with this account.
Browse to https://manage.windowsazure.com
you receive a text message on your phone that you can enter:
You can then fill the following form. Note that the e-mail can be changed to an e-mail address where you prefer to receive messages (this may not be the same as your WAAD account).
Click Next, and the subscription will be created
before you are redirected to the following page:
click on the Portal link in the upper right corner. You get a few welcome screens that show how the portal works:
then you get the usual experience:
In the Active Directory part of the portal, you can access your WAAD domain and manage users. In particular, you can create a co-admin account and ensure this account connects only with 2 factor authentication:
Add the user as a co-admin
Then, this user can connect thru https://activedirectory.windowsazure.com
you receive an SMS on your phone and you are asked to answer it with a code
Type the code on the phone and answer the SMS
Then this user can connect to the management portal
Benjamin
Blog Post by: Benjamin GUINEBERTIERE