Which cmdlet should you run from the Lync Server Management Shell?

You support a customer whose company network includes Microsoft Lync Server 2013 with web
conferencing deployed at a main site named Washington and a branch site named Redmond. All
users have Lync 2013 and Microsoft Outlook 2013 installed. UserA and UserB are both Lync-enabled
users at your customer’s main site. UserA has the Global conferencing policy and the Washington
meeting configuration assigned to his account. UserB has the Redmond conferencing policy and the

Global meeting configuration assigned to his account. In online meetings that UserA schedules, users
can collaborate using videoconferencing. In online meetings scheduled by UserB, videoconferencing
is not available. You need to determine why videoconferencing is unavailable in UserB’s meetings.
Which cmdlet should you run from the Lync Server Management Shell?

You support a customer whose company network includes Microsoft Lync Server 2013 with web
conferencing deployed at a main site named Washington and a branch site named Redmond. All
users have Lync 2013 and Microsoft Outlook 2013 installed. UserA and UserB are both Lync-enabled
users at your customer’s main site. UserA has the Global conferencing policy and the Washington
meeting configuration assigned to his account. UserB has the Redmond conferencing policy and the

Global meeting configuration assigned to his account. In online meetings that UserA schedules, users
can collaborate using videoconferencing. In online meetings scheduled by UserB, videoconferencing
is not available. You need to determine why videoconferencing is unavailable in UserB’s meetings.
Which cmdlet should you run from the Lync Server Management Shell?

A.
Get-CSConferencingPolicy -Identity Redmond

B.
Get-CSMeetingConfiguration -Identity Redmond

C.
Get-CSMeetingConfiguration -Identity Global

D.
Get-CSConferencingPolicy -Identity Global



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