- Microsoft equipment working to add noise suppression for calls
- You must cut background noise such as traffic or writing
- All users of Microsoft teams must benefit from launch
One of the most painful problems by marking a call from Microsoft teams could see being a thing of the past thanks to a new update.
The videoconference platform has revealed that it is working to add noise suppression for participants who mark a call.
Once included, this should mean an end to the interruptions of calls potentially that is divided into the ears, or the participants who are sorded by the background noise of another person in the call.
Microsoft team noise suppression
Microsoft says, in addition to improving user experience for all in a call, the new addition will also “improve clarity and reduce distraction for all meetings participants.”
In a Microsoft 365 road map publication, he said that the function will automatically filter the background noise (such as traffic, writing) for users who join meetings by phone (PSTN).
The characteristic appears as “in development” for the moment, with a date of start of the expected implementation of September 2025.
When it is launched, Microsoft says it will be available for users around the world using equipment in Windows, Mac, Android and iOS, as well as surface equipment and devices, and web equipment.
The launch is the last one of a series of recent improvements to the Microsoft equipment announced by the company, since it seeks to improve the experience for users.
This includes an adjustment that will allow several people to control the slides that are presented at a meeting or called.
Microsoft says that the addition will mean that presenters can maintain “a soft flow during web meetings or seminars”, hopefully, which means that the end of manual changes of slides, and hopefully, the phrase “next slide please.”
It also recently launched text capacities in real time (RTT), allowing participants to write a message while another person’s speech is transcribed, which gives users to write another way of ensuring that their voices come out.