![]() ![]() Persistent Chat, not to be confused with Incessant Chat (which is what comes out of my five year old on long car trips), is a platform for ICQ-style chat rooms built right into Lync. But let’s say three months from now you need to remember what someone said in that conference and can’t find it. Lync is great in that you can drag and drop contacts into the conversation to add them and have all the features (screen sharing and so forth) right at your fingertips. If they keep the window open, and it’s configured, the chat will stay in the user’s conversation history for handy reference.īut what if you wanted to add a third person? Or 30? Well, that’s a conference, son, and is governed by different policies. No problem, the conversation happens, work gets done, and the two move on. Two participants having a bit of an instant chat. Instant messaging communication is typically a point to point affair. Persistent Chat replaces the Lync 2010 feature known as Group Chat and its purpose is fairly simple. I call it a new feature as if it has never been around before, but much like the Lync product itself, it has existed for some time under a different name. Amongst these features is an oft overlooked bit called Persistent Chat (PChat) which, when leveraged properly, can have massive benefits for your organization. Microsoft Lync, in its 2013 iteration, has added a bevy of features beneficial to your business’ effective unified communications. ![]()
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