Google calendar was the first choice, I think, because Evernote uses Google infrastructure and the connections were easier to achieve. Outlook calendar sync has proved rather more difficult than you might imagine to integrate with. Evernote tasks is, currently, a standalone feature. You can connect via third party applications to check boxes and note reminders but not directly to tasks. For most people project is too much of a jump, and way too complicated to be practical for daily use in the case of most small businesses or teams.ĭon’t get me wrong, I am a project fan, but since changing business, the amount of things that lack from not having project is truly disappointing, but we don’t in the new business need all those features, we just need some small basics that you do get only when you get project licenses.Evernote tasks cannot sync with an external program because the API is, yet, to be updated. Pricing needs to be somewhere about 1/3rd the cost of running Project which is what we have to go to to get this functionality. If someone could get a system up and running as a 3rd party/store add in that utilized these planner / outlook task / to-do tools, but gave us time planning capacity, it would be great. This is where old sharepoint task list helped, but he new system chronically fails. Everything runs off due date, which is sure important, but what about the sub steps that must be completed days/weeks and even months before. That is the problem with all lower end office task management tools. It’s not currently on the roadmap, but the customer demand is definitely there. Hopefully in the near future we’ll see full Planner tasks integration with Outlook tasks. Perhaps there will be a fully functional, and easier to use, PowerShell module released some time in the future. PS C:\Scripts\PlannerTenantSettings\lib\net45> Set-PlannerConfiguration -AllowCalendarSharing $falseĪnnoyingly, you will need to authenticate each time you run one of the functions.Ĭalendar sharing is the only Planner setting that is manageable with those functions. PS C:\Scripts\PlannerTenantSettings\lib\net45> Get-PlannerConfiguration Once you have that all set up, you can use the Set-PlannerConfiguration and Get-PlannerConfiguration functions to manage the setting. You might also need to unblock the downloaded DLL files before they will work for you, but my testing wasn’t conclusive either way on that point. I had errors trying to follow the support guidance until I renamed the files. Where Microsoft advises to name the PowerShell module and manifest files as SetPlannerTenantSettings.psm1 and SetPlannerTenantSettings.psd1 respectively, I recommend you instead use SetTenantSettings.psm1 and SetTenantSettings.psd1. The process is a bit awkward, and the documentation appears to have an error. Microsoft has provided a support article with the steps that you can follow to check your configuration, or disable/enable Outlook calendar sync. But for some customers any level of exposure is not acceptable, so it’s up to you how you interpret the risk here.įortunately, you can turn off the iCalendar publishing option. For example, descriptions, sub-tasks, and comments on a Planner task, any of which might contain sensitive information, are not included in the iCalendar feed. And the information included in the iCalendar feed is minimal. The iCalendar link is an obscure URL that would be difficult to guess. The risk in this situation is probably quite low. If you have multi-factor authentication requirements, or any other security measures in place such as conditional access or risk-based sign-in policies, none of that appears to make any difference to whether the URL is accessible by someone outside of your organization. Something that may raise concerns for some organizations is that the iCalendar feed is accessible by anyone who happens to know the URL. Users can publish their tasks from within the My Tasks view of Planner. Little detail is included with the calendar item, but you can click through to Planner to interact with the task. The iCalendar feed offers a limited view of Planner tasks based on their due date. Microsoft controls all the plumbing on the back end to make Outlook and Planner integration work, and I don’t think it should rely on users creating their own Flows that provide a limited experience anyway. You can also integrate Planner tasks and Outlook tasks using Flow, but I don’t count that as proper integration. The feature is enabled by default as it gets rolled out to Office 365 tenants. But in Q1 of this year, Microsoft announced that Planner tasks can be added to the Outlook calendar as an iCalendar feed. The obvious place to synchronize a Planner task would be into the Outlook tasks. After a few years, Microsoft has delivered this capability. One of the top feature requests since the release of Microsoft Planner has been the ability to synchronize Planner tasks with Outlook.
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