Organizations with a subscription that includes Teams Phone are allocated a certain amount of Teams Phone Resource Account licenses at no extra cost. A Microsoft calling plan isn't required unless you want to be able to dial out using that resource account. For more information, see Plan for Teams auto attendant and call queues.
Don't assign a Teams Phone Standard license to a resource account. If you currently have resource accounts configured with Teams Phone Standard licenses, you must switch to a Teams Phone Resource Account license as described below.
Your organization is allotted Teams Phone Resource Account licenses based on its overall size. Any organization that has a subscription with Phone System features, such as Teams Phone Standard, Teams Phone with Calling Plan, and Teams Shared Devices licenses, is allocated 25 Teams Phone Resource Account licenses available at no cost.
For every 10 user licenses of Teams Phone Standard, Teams Phone with Calling Plan, or devices with Teams Shared Devices license in your organization, one more Teams Phone Resource Account license becomes available. Most organizations will have enough Teams Phone Resource Account licenses based on this scaling plan.
Your allocation of Teams Phone Resource Account licenses is not automatically added to your tenant. You will need to go through the purchasing process for Teams Phone Resource Account licenses. Licenses within your allocation of Teams Phone Resource Account licenses will be zero cost. Any Teams Phone Resource Account license that exceeds your allocation of licenses will have a cost.
Contoso, Inc. purchased 500 licenses that include Phone System (one for each employee) and has 100 devices licensed with the Teams Shared Devices license. Contoso is allotted an initial 25 plus 60 Teams Phone Resource Account licenses, 85 in total. Their organization has 90 call queues and auto attendants. They need to assign all the Teams Phone Resource Account licenses and purchase five extra Teams Phone Resource Account licenses.
Hi I used the free version of Phonerescue 4 on my iPhone with iOS 13.1 or 13.2 (Can't remember). I disconnected it early because I changed my mind (So about 500 megabytes). I want to know if anyone thinks it installs malware to your iPhone, I updated to the most recent version right after. I did see that it does actually find deleted data based on what I saw. I have seen positives and negatives from people and I also I downloaded it from the actual site. I haven't had any issues so far on my mac or phone but still... I also had my security software up that blocks malicious dns as well. Do you think malware got installed on my phone and uploads data to a server?
PhoneRescue is a good alternative for other deleted file recovery solutions like EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard Free Edition and Windows File Recovery. It is easier to use for pairings with mobile devices, making it a more preferred choice.
As a data recovery app, PhoneRescue builds on the iCloud service and expands its capabilities on your mobile device. It can recover more than 25 different file types to begin with. This gives you a fighting chance of getting back your precious videos, photos, and music files. It also has the ability to restore files that are lost, corrupted, or accidentally deleted in between backups.
For backup recovery measures, this program connects your device by letting you login with your Apple ID. After accessing your account, the app makes it easier to recover by sorting all available backups for your device. After choosing and downloading the saved copy of your device back to your gadget, all you have to do is wait for the process to complete itself. Additionally, the app lets you choose particular files from the specific backup. This allows you to save space and time by choosing which files must go before copying them back to your device.
Intended for people with technical knowledge as well as the average gadget user, PhoneRescue sports a simple interface that sorts the services it offers without a lot of visual fanfare. There are no ads, and no unnecessary display when you use the app. This streamlined appearance and user-friendly interface make the app convenient to use for all kinds of users. Also, there are explainers and tutorials that better explain what each feature does.
Where'd you hear it was a myth?? I've had multiple accidents with water and electronics, once I wasn't able to get rice and just dried it out. Never worked again. Whereas whenever I tried it with rice it worked. Maybe rice isn't the BEST thing to dry it with, but I do believe it has effects on wet electronics.
You'd be hard-pressed to find any experienced professional in the repair industry that doesn't roll their eyes when they hear the word "rice." We see the sad result of phones/devices that have been carefully placed in the Mahatma bag with fingers crossed.
What I partially disagree with is the idea of using hardcore rubbing alcohol. Solvents like that might attack the plastic and cause color change. There are so many types of plastic and films inside a phone that it is hard to predict what effect iso-propyl would have. But distilled water should have a much better chance of diluting and washing out the bad stuff. Then putting the phone in a warm place can allow the water to evaporate out faster.
But this is not the point: the rice/silica will only absorb what water evaporates out of the phone. And if the water still in the phone is conductive (say, from chemical-filled pool water or poefies from the toilet), then it doesn't matter what is done, the phone circuitry will suffer. And there haven't been phones that can be opened since the Note 2 (not sure about LG, but you know what I mean). Rice or silica notwithstanding, that water will not be going anywhere without leaving gunk behind.
약국's are everywhere, and they all sell bottles of medical-grade distilled water, for W2000 ($2?). If the phone was flushed with it, any conductive junk would be diluted or even removed completely. Then rice/silica/spinning-around, plus some warmth would work to help remove the remaining distilled water.
Hi Leo,
nobody contest your professionalism when it comes to electronics. But for most people the rice thing worked! Believe me my phone was submerged in a water tank when I was doing something. On that incident I quickly turned off my phone and take out the battery. Open up my phone and all its components are all wet. At first I blew some air on it and then put it in the rice drawer for a few hours and it worked. Since then I never had problem with my phone except for not long lasting battery of course. I have my phone for 3 years now, and still going. Maybe the rice thing is not the best recommended in the electronics industry but the technical explanation for this is the rice and or silica absorbs the moisture in your components that's why it is working. Simple science can answer the theory. Thanks!
I really wish this was not on the instructable site. To keep perpetuating this idea that you can dry out a wet phone with anything other than 99.9% alcohol is very concerning for many reasons which I'll go into later and you are perpetuating a myth that has been debunked by Technicians and scientists alike. Wet phones do not work after the components get wet. Let me explain: If you phone got wet and you dried it out and miraculously it worked....then the vital components inside DID NOT actually get wet. If your phone got vital components wet and you dried it out then that phone will fail inevitably. It's just science. Copper and water mixed with electricity create corrosion. The kind that eats away at the solder of micro components like the ones on your phone.
The Rice Myth:
Rice has about the same absorption rate as a damp paper towel. While your method is heads above using rice you are still missing the actual issue. Corrosion on the components. This rice myth or blow dryer myth came about because someone used it on a phone that was wet BUT did not actually get wet on the vital components inside. Therefore they put it in rice and ... viola! It works. But it was always going to work rice or not because the logic board did not get wet. Or if it did get wet and worked after it dried out then it might work for awhile but will eventually fail because the corrosion will eat at those components over time.
The reason I'm coming down on this so hard is because what you are doing could affect someone very negatively. Let's take a real example that from a client of mine: A mother who has photos of her deceased child on their phone gets it wet and instead of going to a qualified technician she decides to put it in rice or try your method. Doing this literally makes the phone and it's pictures unrecoverable because now we have a phone that has water under the CPU or other chip and now that corrosion has made this phone almost impossible to recover. Where as if he/she had gotten it to a technician before it dried out then it would have been rather simple to open up the phone, run it through a Crest cleaner then soak it in 99.9% alcohol and then that phone would have maybe needed to replace a couple of capacitors that blew and would and a recovery of her photos would have been possible. See what I mean? I know you mean well but this idea of drying out a phone that's been wet is a serious problem for people who really need their data, pictures, anything back off that phone. Not only that it is has absolutely no basis in science and in fact science has proven it wrong. Now if you don't need your data then you still only have a 50/50 chance of getting your phone back in working order with one of the dry out methods.
Don't take my word for it. Talk to the experts:
1. iFixit.com one of the leading and most respected companies that sell parts for phones and provide free repair manuals to anyone took a product off their site because they were convinced that they were doing more harm than good. That product was a rice Pouch for wet phones.
2. iPad Rehab and Jessa Jones are one of the leading data recovery experts in the world. She not only offers repairs for half the price of anyone else she is constantly educating people through her youtube channel. Here is what she has to say.
No offence to you or your instructable but and Kudos for being featured but I really wish you'd take it down because you might be inadvertently responsible for someone losing their treasured photos or data and that shouldn't be on anyone's conscience.
Respectfully,
iHeartMacs