Microsoft has today started rolling out the consumer-facing version of itsvideo conferencing softwareMicrosoft Teams in preview. Thepreview is live across Android and iOSplatforms via the Microsoft Teams app.
Getting started with Microsoft Teams for staying in touch with your friends and family is quite simple. If you are already a Teams user, you can simplyhead to Settings and add a new personal Microsoft account. In case you’re a new user, you may download the app and sign up with a personal Microsoft account or your phone number.
Microsoftpitches the following featuresthat might intrigue you to start using Teams:
Microsoft Teams leverages its enterprise features to offer you all the essential features including group chats, group voice calls, and group video calls. You can also perform one-on-one chats and calls. In addition, you get all the basic file sharing features such as the ability to share GIFs, photos, videos, documents, and location.
Group Dashboard is what sets Teams apart from theplethora of messaging platforms. You can share lists, documents, and calendars with a person or a group via the group dashboard feature. This way, you can easily stay in the loop in an organized manner.
As you would expect from a Microsoft product,Teams has integrations with other Microsoft 365 apps such as Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. Hence, you can easily collaborate on various documents easily right from within the Teams app.Image: Microsoft
Safe, as the name hints, is asecure vault that lets you store and share important details including but not limited to passwords, login credentials, and IDs. Microsoft says Safe is secured with two-factor authentication and end-to-end encryption.Image: Microsoft
Location sharing helps you stay updated with your loved ones. While the feature won’t be quite useful right now given that most of us are staying at home anyway, it would come in handy in the future as the world adopts the new-normal.
Microsoft will collect feedback over the coming weeks in the preview phase and will expand Teams for consumers to the desktop and web versions later this year.
Subin writes about consumer tech, software, and security. He secretly misses the headphone jack while pretending he’s better off with the wireless freedom.