
KB 5005522 Can’t add a second PSTN call if Mediation Server serves different site gateways in Skype for Business Server 2015. KB 5005520 Busy on Busy setting isn’t ignored for a Team Call group in Skype for Business Server 2015. KB 5005513 RTCSrv crashes on all Front End servers in all pools in Skype for Business Server 2015. KB 5005511 Skype for Business client disconnects every few minutes. KB 5005510 Can’t escalate a conversation to a conference if LBR is enforced in Skype for Business Server 2015. KB 5005507 “403 forbidden” when sending a SIP REFER request to a federated user in Skype for Business Server 2015. KB 4583494 Missed call notification because of wrong handling of SIP header in Skype for Business Server 20. KB 5005525 Incorrect message of checking name when using a valid name to create a chat room in Skype for Business Server 2015. KB 5005523 An iPhone receives a call instead of a file from a Skype for Business desktop client. KB 5005516 Can’t create IVR response groups in Skype for Business Server 2015. KB 4576668 Support push notification for iOS 13 in Skype for Business Server 20. KB 4576666 Contact card shows wrong title in a meeting on Skype for Business on Mac. KB 5005508 Using AlwaysUnverifiable with AllowedDomain treats the domain as discovered in Skype for Business Server 2015. KB 5005517 Users are removed from a meeting when using Skype for Business Server 2015 UCWA applications. KB 5005509 PAI is removed when a call is forwarded in Skype for Business Server 2015. KB 5005505 “Set up Voice Mail” option in Skype for Business client redirects to Outlook on the web instead of Cloud Voicemail. Check out the scary one I’ve highlighted: What’s Fixed?
It updated seven components on my Standard Edition Front-End, and also uninstalled the now-defunct Skype for Business Online PowerShell module.
It’s been three months since our last update to Skype for Business Server 2015, which was a rare security update that took us to. I’ve used it personally to make a “phone call” between my modem and our home burglar alarm, allowing me to reprogram the latter from within the building.Ĭontinue reading ‘OzPLAR – the 2021 telephone intercom revamp’ »įiled under Electronics | Comment SfB 2015 Server Update – August 2021 In a corporate environment it could be used to couple two phone systems or telephony gateway devices that only had FXO interfaces, or turn an FXO port into an FXS one. Service people could use it to test and repair telephones, telephone collectors used it to make static displays more interactive, and it saw use on stage and screen where a phone was required to ring on set. Lifting one handset automatically started the other ringing, and cradling both devices resets it.Īpplications were the obvious “batphone” intercom between two locations, whether those be neighbours down a country road, or from the main house to the granny-flat. The intercom unit powered two telephones, allowing you to talk between them. Photocopies of that original article are still available from Silicon Chip, and they kindly let me re-publish the circuit here. My original telephone intercom project was published in Silicon Chip magazine here in Oz in May 1992.