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Conferencing Policy Settings: AllowUserToScheduleMeetingsWithAppSharing

 

This article is part of the series An In-Depth Guide to Conferencing Policy Settings.

 

 

Parameter/Property Name

Allowed Values

AllowUserToScheduleMeetingsWithAppSharing

 

This is a per-organizer setting.

· TRUE: Application sharing is allowed in meetings. This is the default value.

· FALSE: Application sharing is not allowed in meetings.

 

Lync Server Control Panel Equivalent Setting: Application sharing

 

 

 

As a general rule, the conferencing policy settings aren't too difficult to understand. Some of them have odd names – like EnableDataCollaboration – but once you know what the EnableDataCollaboration setting is for, well, then it's all pretty simple and straightforward.

 

So is the AllowUserToScheduleMeetingsWithAppSharing setting somehow different from the other policy settings? Well, no, not really: once you know what the AllowUserToScheduleMeetingsWithAppSharing setting is for it turns out to be pretty simple and straightforward, too. But this one is a wee bit more complicated than most settings, if only because it seemingly-conflicts with the EnableAppDesktopSharing setting. How do those two settings conflict, and who wins if and when they do conflict? We'll get to that in just a minute.

 

But first things first. As you probably know, Microsoft Lync gives the chance to share things during a meeting or a peer-to-peer session: by default, you can share either you entire desktop (which essentially means sharing your entire computer) or a specific application. It's up to you.

 

And what exactly does it mean to share your desktop or an application? It means two things. First, it means that everything you do on your computer (or in that single application) is visible to everyone else in the meeting; for example, if you're typing away in Microsoft Word, everyone will be able to see what you're typing, how you're formatting the text, etc., etc.

 

Note. Yes, it is sort of like being on TV.

 

Sort of.

 

Second (and, again, by default) anyone in the meeting can ask to take control of your desktop or your shared application. Again, suppose you're sharing Microsoft Word. Anyone else in the meeting could request to take control of the application and, if you say OK, they'll be able to start typing in Word. It's your copy of Word and it's running on your computer, but someone else can sit at their desk and type away as if the application belonged to them.

 

That's the easy part. Now here's where things get a little complicated. (But just a little.) As we noted a minute ago, there are two different conferencing policy settings that control application sharing. The EnableAppDesktopSharing setting is a per-user setting that allows a given user to share:

 

· His or her desktop

· A specific application

· Nothing

 

Because this is a per-user setting that means it applies to each individual user each time they join a meeting. In turn, that means that, in a given meeting, some users might be able to share applications and some users might not be able to share applications. (Everyone can always see the shared applications, regardless.) That means you could potentially have a meeting in which the meeting organizer can't share applications but everyone else in the meeting can share applications. That isn't necessarily good or bad; it's just a scenario that could crop up.

 

And what if you'd just as soon that this scenario doesn't crop up? That's where the AllowUserToScheduleMeetingsWithAppSharing setting comes in. This setting applies to the organizer of the meeting and lets you determine whether or not anyone in a meeting will be allowed to use application sharing. If this value is set to True (and if the meeting organizer is allowed to share his or her desktop) then that organizer will see something like this when he or she clicks on the Share menu in the Conversation window:

 

 

 

Meanwhile, everyone else in the meeting will see whatever options have been granted to them using the EnableAppDesktopSharing setting in their conferencing policy.

 

Got that? OK. Now suppose our meeting organizer has a conferencing policy in which AllowUserToScheduleMeetingsWithAppSharing has been set to False. In that case, the meeting organizer, and everyone else in the conference, will see something like this when they click the Share menu:

 

 

Why are the Desktop and Program options grayed-out? That's easy: because the meeting organizer is not allowed to schedule a meeting that includes application sharing. That means that the organizer can't share applications; equally important, it means that no one else in the meeting can share applications.

 

No one.

 

In other words, suppose we have two users and two conferencing policies. Like, say, these two:

 

User

Conferencing Policy

AllowUserToScheduleMeetingsWithAppSharing

Pilar Ackerman

global

False

Ken Myer

RedmondConferencingPolicy

True

 

Pilar Ackerman schedules a meeting. Will Pilar be able to share applications in that meeting? No. Will anyone be allowed to share applications in that meeting? In a word; no. Pilar's conferencing policy doesn't allow for shared applications.

 

Now, Ken Myer schedules a meeting. Will Ken be allowed to share applications in that meeting? Maybe; it depends on the value of the EnableAppDesktopSharing setting in his conferencing policy. Will Pilar be allowed to share applications in that meeting? Maybe; it depends on the value of the EnableAppDesktopSharing setting in her conferencing policy. But as long as your EnableAppDesktopSharing setting allows you to share applications then yes, you (whoever you are) can share applications in one of Ken's meetings.

 

Incidentally, here's some sample code for disabling application sharing in a meeting organized by anyone who uses the global conferencing policy:

 

Set-CsConferencingPolicy –Identity global –AllowUserToScheduleMeetingsWithAppSharing $False

 

And here's code that enables application sharing in a meeting organized by anyone who uses the global conferencing policy:

 

Set-CsConferencingPolicy –Identity global –AllowUserToScheduleMeetingsWithAppSharing $True