Overall find it pretty good and comparable in most cases to on prem exchange. The biggest difference/issue we have with o365 vs on prem is the time taken to sync new copies of mailboxes – so on new computers, or users changing computers and it has to sync their mailbox. It can very easily flood their link which then affects everyone, and take hours or in some cases days to sync larger mailboxes on particularly slow links.
One thing I have seen an increase on is niggly issues with Outlook. Just basic stuff like notifications not working, or not working properly. Also seeing issues with Outlook claiming to be unlicensed even though a valid licensed user is logged in. These are not specific to o365 email – but the office license is purchased through o365 Support has been pretty average at best. Not helped by the fact your generally relegated to CSP support through your distributor, which means lodging a ticket with them and having them then lodge the ticket with Microsoft. It can be very time consuming, which when you have a somewhat urgent issue an be frustrating. MS support has been pretty useless each time I’ve dealt with them and I’m yet to have had them actually fix a problem or find a resolution. Normally I’ve had to find a work around or in a few cases the issue just fixed itself. I fear this is only going to get worse as more and more people get onboard. From: AusNOG <ausnog-boun...@lists.ausnog.net> On Behalf Of Robert Hudson Sent: Tuesday, 19 June 2018 1:38 PM To: Paul Wilkins <paulwilkins...@gmail.com> Cc: ausnog@lists.ausnog.net Subject: Re: [AusNOG] [AUSNOG] o365 experience "user experience can never equal local Exchange." The cached mode Outlook client comes VERY close. Stop treating email as an instant messaging service or calendar as if it updates immediately, and it works perfectly fine. I reckon I can count on one hand the number of situations where running your own Exchange server on-premises is worth doing over cloud-hosted collaboration. Not that any of this belongs on AusNOG I suspect... On Tue, 19 Jun 2018 at 11:04, Paul Wilkins <paulwilkins...@gmail.com<mailto:paulwilkins...@gmail.com>> wrote: I'd be interested to hear general opinions and lessons learned from o365 migrations. So far as I've seen, the architecture (network and services) is complex, and user experience can never equal local Exchange. So much so it leaves me wondering if the effort of migration can be justified? At the end of the day, you need a performant service, not finger pointing between networks and services, and blaming performance on insufficient network/proxy scale out. Kind Regards Paul Wilkins _______________________________________________ AusNOG mailing list AusNOG@lists.ausnog.net<mailto:AusNOG@lists.ausnog.net> http://lists.ausnog.net/mailman/listinfo/ausnog
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