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        How Microsoft Is Managing Higher Microsoft 365 User Demand
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - March 24, 2020
 
		
        
As businesses transition their employees to remote work en masse, Microsoft is    adjusting the availability of some Microsoft 365 features to account for the surge in demand for cloud services.
In an effort to restrict the spread of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) and to comply with state official-declared limits on  large gatherings, many organizations have sent  their employees home to work. This has caused a spike in demand  from home users for Microsoft 365 features (for instance, the user base of Microsoft Teams ballooned by 12 million in the span of seven days). Microsoft announced this week that it's making adjustments to address this  extra demand.
There wasn't a Microsoft public announcement about the   feature changes, but this new notice apparently was delivered through  the Microsoft Message Center, which gets seen by administrators managing  Microsoft 365 services. The new measures come on top of  Teams feature  adjustments made a week earlier with regard to the frequency of presence checks  and checks for typing during collaborations, plus a reduction in video  resolution in the Teams service.  
Microsoft 365  Feature Changes
The new adjustments affect features in OneNote in Teams, SharePoint  and Stream services. Here's a reconstruction of that message:
  OneNote:
  
    - OneNote in Teams will be read-only for  commercial tenants, excluding EDU. Users can go to OneNote for the web for  editing.
 
    - Download size and sync frequency of file  attachments has been changed.
 
    - You can find details on these and other OneNote  related updates as http://aka.ms/notesupdates.
 
  
  SharePoint:
  
    - We are rescheduling specific backend operations  to regional evening and weekend business hours. Impacted capabilities include  migration, DLP and delays in file management after uploading a new file, video  or image.
 
    - Reduced video resolution for playback videos.
 
  
  Stream:
  
    - People timeline has been disabled for newly  uploaded videos. Pre-existing videos will not be impacted.
 
    - Meeting recording video resolution adjusted to  720p.
 
  
Windows Feature  Changes
  Meanwhile, at the Windows  Message Center page, which is publicly accessible, Microsoft announced on  March 24 that it's planning to stop delivering optional Windows nonsecurity  updates (intended for testing) that get delivered in the third ("C")  and fourth ("D") weeks, starting in May. 
Here's Microsoft's statement:
  Starting in May 2020, we are pausing all optional non-security releases  (C and D updates) for all supported versions of Windows client and server  products (Windows 10, version 1909 down through Windows Server 2008 SP2).
The nonsecurity update pause is being done due to the "public  health situation" and so that Microsoft can better focus on its security  updates.
Prioritization
Last week, Microsoft outlined how it would address  increased demand on its services in an  Azure announcement, prioritizing it for government and first responders:
  As demand continues to grow, if we are faced with any capacity  constraints in any region during this time, we have established clear criteria  for the priority of new cloud capacity. Top priority will be going to first  responders, health and emergency management services, critical government  infrastructure organizational use, and ensuring remote workers stay up and  running with the core functionality of Teams. We will also consider adjusting  free offers, as necessary, to ensure support of existing customers. 
There apparently haven't been any recent Microsoft 365 service  disruptions, except for a Teams chat problem in Europe that Microsoft announced  fixed on March 17, according to the Microsoft 365 Status Twitter feed.  However, a  Tuesday report by veteran Microsoft reporter Mary Jo Foley suggested that  some Azure users in Europe are seeing capacity constraints.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.