I have a question about usage alias and cloud e-mail. Let's say that my customer have two domains x.com and x.pl. He wants to migrate mailbox with domain x.pl into cloud. But some of his eployees must be in x.com domain and they don't have account in clodu. Did the employee can create alias user1#x.pl (in cloud theres no account user1#x.pl)? Summing up I want to chcek that the employee can use e-mail adress user1#x.pl like an alias when his primary mailbox is in x.com domain on other provider?
User user1#x.com uses domain from other provider. User user2#x.pl uses domain from Office 365. User user1#x.pl ID don’t exist in Office 365. User user1#x.com want to use alias user1#x.pl – is this is possible when domain x.pl is use in Office 365?
Best regards,
You are probably looking on how to configure a shared address space with Exchange. See http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb676395.aspx for more information on this topic.
One of the mail server (either yours or the cloud ones) must have the option to forward mails for accounts on "the other" server. There is no way to tell alien mail servers "mails to this accounts go to this server, the others to the other one".
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I have a 365 tenant on domain {somename}.onmicrosoft.com and a connected domain {othername}.com
I was able to create users as {username}#{othername}.com
I wonder how I can have pages show with https://{othername}.com ?
Is there an admin action to take or should I add a CNAME?
Thank you
If you have added domain as your tenant domain you can manage DNS via your office 365 admin portal https://admin.microsoft.com/Adminportal/Home?source=applauncher#/Domains
You can simply add an A record to your web server.
Turned out, you can forward sub domain (like www. for example) at the domain manager. it is not a CNAME.
So now https://www.{othername}.com will take me to {somename}.onmicrosoft.com but will also show {somename}.onmicrosoft.com in the address bar but that's OK.
Thanks
I'm developing an application that requires us to use Microsoft Graph API to create Teams meetings for users. This is obviously only possible with tenant domain email accounts (not guests) as you cannot do it on behalf of the user. Is it possible that I can add a new domain/organization to it so any of the new domain email addresses can be used to create meetings (don't get added as guests)?
Yes, you can create a new domain but you can add user's from another tenant as guest only, It is by design.
I need to click the activation links in our Azure B2C accounts which end with x.onmicrosoft.com.
How can I accomplish that?
Should we set up an email server or is there a more practical way to accomplish this task?
You can't, basically. onmicrosoft.com is the parent domain owned by Microsoft and the do not allow you to specify the required DNS changes that would allow you to setup a mail server for say joeblogs.onmicrosoft.com. You need to either collect valid email addresses at registration time or disable email activation.
I have a google corporate account, I have already set up 5 other domain alias for my email accounts. I already own all these domains, and all of the domains were registered through the same hosting company.
for example:
john#domain1.com
john#domain2.com
john#domain3.com
john#domain4.com
john#domain5.com
But I am trying to add another alias and google tells me that the domain is already in use, which is not possible because I own this domain already. Has anyone else experienced this? Does anyone know how I would go about fixing this?
It turns out the previous owner was still verified as the owner. I had to contact google support and they sent me the instructions to verify us as the owners of the domain.
I've got a problem where I have a .co.uk domain of which I am the registrant but my web developers control the domain via easyspace.com. I'm not using the web developers anymore and it ended on bad terms so I would like to change my domain to another registrar without getting them involved. Does anyone know how I can do this?
Thanks
In order to do anything with your domain, you need to be a registered user for it. for every domain, there 4 types of registered user:
Registrant/Owner
Administrative Contact
Billing Contact
and Technical Contact
If you do a whois look-up of your domain name you can see if you are one of those registered users.
If you are, you should be able to contact the Registrar of record (i.e. GoDaddy, Network Solutions, GKG, etc.) and gain an account control login if you do not already have a login for them.
Once you have an account, you can change the Name Servers thereby pointing your site to a different server than it is currently, or initiate a transfer to a new registrar (which costs money - typically the price of a 1 year registration)
Tell them to give you control of it. You're not asking them to do something for you, you're just demanding them to hand over what's yours (assuming the domain is yours).
If you own the domain name, you should be able to change the information with the registrar to point it at another hosting service or your own.
Change your domain host to point to a new name server that you control.
You may lose your web site code but can always start a fresh.