I work for an organization that uses Microsoft Lync, AKA Skype for Business. The problem is that when two clients connect, one official Lync Client, and one Pidgin, depending on a seeming coin toss of chance, all messages could wind up going to the Pidgin/Spectrum Client, rather than the official Lync Client.
I use Pidgin to utilize Skype for Business at home. If I leave home with Skype for Business/Lync Running, I miss any messages intended for my at work workstation. This is a problem with Lync itself, not Pidgin, or purple-sipe, or Spectrum 2.
The only way to stop this is to Secure Shell in, and kill the entire Pidgin instance via a Terminal on my Phone, which terminates my entire Pidgin session, and any networks I am connected too. in addition to my history.
I'd like the ability to enable and disable spectrum2 accounts with either the web interface, or a command to the XMPP bot.
I work for an organization that uses Microsoft Lync, AKA Skype for Business. The problem is that when two clients connect, one official Lync Client, and one Pidgin, depending on a seeming coin toss of chance, all messages could wind up going to the Pidgin/Spectrum Client, rather than the official Lync Client.
I use Pidgin to utilize Skype for Business at home. If I leave home with Skype for Business/Lync Running, I miss any messages intended for my at work workstation. This is a problem with Lync itself, not Pidgin, or purple-sipe, or Spectrum 2.
The only way to stop this is to Secure Shell in, and kill the entire Pidgin instance via a Terminal on my Phone, which terminates my entire Pidgin session, and any networks I am connected too. in addition to my history.
I'd like the ability to enable and disable spectrum2 accounts with either the web interface, or a command to the XMPP bot.