Microsoft Teams optimizations for Windows App on iOS and Android now generally available



 Windows IT Pro Blog:

Today, we’re announcing the general availability of Teams optimizations (WebRTC Redirector Service) for Windows App on iOS and Windows App on Android, expanding support for optimized Microsoft Teams experiences when connecting to Windows 365 and Azure Virtual Desktop from mobile devices.

Optimized Teams experiences for mobile devices​

Teams optimizations for Windows App on iOS and Android are designed to improve how audio and video are handled during Teams calls and meetings in virtualized environments. By leveraging media redirection techniques, audio and video processing can occur on the local device rather than entirely within the virtual session, which is intended to support more responsive interactions during meetings.

Teams optimizations are designed to support:
  • Improved audio and video handling during Teams calls and meetings
  • More consistent media experiences across a range of network conditions
  • A familiar Teams experience when joining meetings from mobile devices using Windows App
During public preview, customers evaluated these optimizations in real‑world scenarios.

With this release, organizations can begin deploying Windows App on iOS and Android with support for Teams media optimizations as a generally available capability when accessing Azure Virtual Desktop and Windows 365, subject to supported configurations.

Try it today​

If you’re using Windows App on iOS or Android, you can start using Teams optimizations today. Windows App is available on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store.

We want your feedback​

Customer feedback continues to play an important role in how Windows 365 and Azure Virtual Desktop experiences evolve. We encourage you to share what’s working well and where there are opportunities for improvement.



 Source:

 
I was on the MS Teams official enterprise forum and I said the most wanted feature was two way sharing of screeens i.e. if you had two monitors you could transmit one monitor to another person and receive the other persons second monitor.

The problem without two way sharing is you have to keep turning off sharing your screen so other person can share their screen.

This suggestion got a very high backing and MS reps stated "they would take it on board" which is, of course, corporate bs for "it will never see the light of day".
 

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