Naturally, Zoom was often dropped on Uservoice and the Tech Community by those who were – let’s say – anxious to see the feature rolled out. Whilst background blur had always been a warmly received feature, users wanted the ability to personalise the meeting experience – and like the wallpaper on their desktops and mobiles show off their interests and passions and identities. Microsoft demoed it as far back as March 2019 and a lot of unhappiness and criticism built up throught the year around the delay of it’s release. So the ability to add an image to your background in a video call – what is now known collectively with background blur as background effects – was a feature many in the tech community wanted for a long time. And as always I want to give you a bit more to make it worth your time After a year on this series I still feel as passionate about it as when I first started. Immediately after I had to submit several sessions to several conferences – all of which I am happy to say I was accepted for. When it dropped into general availability I was in the middle of writing 30 blogs in 30 days for the #fightcorona series. This could very well be the 100th blog that you have read on background effects in Microsoft Teams.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |