Overview
In July 2024, the UO transitiones about 8,300 accounts to a different type of Microsoft license. This article provides answers to frequently asked questions about that transition.
Table of contents
Questions
What's changed?
- Microsoft has retired its A1 Plus license type, so we switched everyone with that license to the A1 license.
- That means they lost access to:
- The desktop versions of Office software*, which are necessary for certain advanced features, such as mail merge.
- Publisher and Access applications. (No web versions exist.)
- The same accounts now have a storage quota of 100 GB.
*Exception: The desktop version of the Teams app is available free worldwide.
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When did it change?
- On Tuesday, July 16.
- We wanted to complete the transition before Microsoft removed the A1 Plus license type for all education-sector customers in August.
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Who was affected?
- This change only affected people and accounts with the Microsoft A1 Plus license. That included:
- Affiliations:
- Campus Associate
- Examples: Various contractors.
- Courtesy
- Examples: Visiting faculty, visiting researchers, visiting postdocs.
- Emerit
- Retired
- Temporary Employee
- Accounts:
- If someone has two positions, they get the highest-tier Microsoft license they qualify for.
- Example: When Emerit faculty teach classes, they get an additional Faculty affiliation, which grants them the A5 license.
For details, see the UO Affiliations and Microsoft Licensing page.
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What do you mean by temporary employee?
- UO employees with a temporary employee affiliation currently have A1 Plus licenses and will be transitioned to A1 licenses in July 2024.
- Agency temps don’t have their own UO Microsoft licenses because they don’t have UO affiliations. However, if they use role accounts for their UO work, they're still affected by this change.
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How did we get here?
- According to Microsoft, it "introduced Office 365 A1 Plus to schools in 2015 to ease the provisioning burden for IT of moving users to the cloud." That's the same year that the University of Oregon got a Microsoft site license.
- A1 Plus licenses were free to the UO as part of our Microsoft site license, as are the A1 licenses.
- Microsoft previously hinted about retiring the A1 Plus license type. Many universities were already using A1 licenses for comparable purposes.
- At the UO, we chose to postpone the transition until summer 2024 so affected users could keep using the desktop apps for as long as possible — which was ultimately nine years (2015-2024).
- After Microsoft announced a deadline, Information Services staff proceeded as quickly as possible with impact analysis, then provided affected users, departments, and the UO community with as much notice as possible.
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What's stayed the same?
- People who were switched to the A1 license kept their access to the web versions of the Office apps, such as:
- Outlook
- Word
- Excel
- PowerPoint
- Excel
- OneNote
- OneDrive
- SharePoint
- etc.
- For everyone else at the UO — faculty, staff, and students — all of their Microsoft 365 access remained the same.
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Do I need to take action?
- Information Services notified affected users, including owners of role accounts, the first week of June 2024. Please look for an email from Information Services News (isnews@uoregon.edu).
- Affected users, their supervisors, and department budget managers should review the options below and consider what will work best for them and their departments. Please note that some options cost money.
- We encourage affected users to try using the web versions of the Office apps to determine whether those will work for their jobs.
- Please contact tech support if you have questions or need help.
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What options do we have after the transition?
- Option 1: Use the web versions of the Office apps.
- Cost: No additional cost.
- Use case: The web apps work for most uses of Office apps, except for certain advanced features.
- Getting started: Visit office.uoregon.edu.
- More context: Microsoft's technology roadmap is web-first, so our current desktop applications are slated to be phased out eventually anyway. The web versions are the future.
- Option 2: Use a shared computer that’s licensed.
- Cost: No additional cost.
- Use case: People who use a shared UO computer, such as many temporary employees and student employees.
- Getting started:
- Shared Windows and Mac computers managed by Information Services already have the Office apps installed, so no action is required for those.
- For computers not managed by IS, and for other scenarios, please contact tech support to explore whether this option might work for you.
- Option 3: Ask your department to buy an individual license upgrade through Information Services.
- Cost: Currently $118.00 per account per year. Prices subject to change.
- Use case: People who need an advanced feature, such as mail merge, that's not available in the web version of an Office app.
- Note: Requires sponsorship by a UO employee.
- Getting started: Please contact tech support.
- More context:
- You would be upgraded to an A5 license, which is equivalent to the A5 license that faculty, staff, and students have. Learn more at Microsoft Software Availability by UO Affiliation.
- A limited number of such individual upgrades will be offered because they require extensive coordination and processing by multiple UO teams each year.
- Option 4 (personal use only): Buy discounted subscription to Microsoft 365.
- Cost: 30% discount on select Microsoft 365 subscriptions.
- Use case: Retirees who want to install the Office apps on personal computers for personal use.
- Note: Requires UO email account.
- Getting started: For purchasing details, visit the Microsoft Workplace Discount Program website.
- More context: This option is NOT appropriate for UO computers or UO business uses. (Instead, see options 1-3 above or contact tech support.)
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Are there training resources about the web apps?
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How do the web and desktop apps differ?
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Can I continue using role accounts in the Outlook desktop app?
- If you're a student, faculty, or staff member who doesn't have an affected affiliation, then you can continue using role accounts in the Outlook desktop app as long as you've set up the app using your own individual UO account.
- If you have an affected affiliation or you log in only via a role account, then you can only use the Outlook desktop app on on a UO-owned shared computer that’s properly licensed (see Option 2 above).
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What about OneDrive storage quotas?
- Microsoft recently applied a new OneDrive storage quota of 100 GB to everyone who currently has an A1 Plus license. That quota went into effect some time on or after February 1.
- Our understanding from Microsoft is that people will get notifications when they reach 90% of the quota and when they exceed it. Otherwise, people may not receive any direct notifications from Microsoft about the quota.
- As of June 2024, only about 2% of affected users (about 180 people) were using more than 100 GB. Those people can still access their data (to remove files) but can't add new files.
- No data will be deleted.
Before deleting files or other data, or moving them out of UO systems, employees should be aware of their recordkeeping responsibilities as explained in the short video Records and Our Shared Responsibilities from University Records Management.
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What if I need more storage?
- If you have the new 100 GB storage quota in OneDrive and you need more storage, you can use SharePoint and Teams.
- SharePoint and Teams sites start with 1 TB of storage each, expandable to 5 TB upon request.
- To move files from OneDrive to SharePoint, please follow these steps provided by Microsoft.
- Tech support is available to help with the transition.
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Does this affect my UO email storage quota?
- No. Affected accounts will keep the same storage quota for their UO email accounts that they have today.
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Can't the UO upgrade those 8,300 accounts?
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Where can I ask questions or get help?
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