I am currently attempting to add the 30 Days Additional Email Activity History add-on to a sendgrid subscription that is managed from Azure Marketplace.
Is this possible?
I've tried clicking "Buy add-on" but end up on the "You don't have access to this page" page. I am the account admin, so would expect to have access.
I've also tried looking for the add-on inside Azure marketplace but can't locate it.
When you buy SendGrid through the Azure Marketplace, you can only purchase what is included in the marketplace offering. To be able to purchase these add-ons, you need to create an account with SendGrid directly, which will also give you access to other features that aren’t available through the Azure Marketplace.
If you already have resources in your subscription you need to keep, I'd suggest reaching out to SendGrid support to help move things over to a direct SendGrid account.
Related
I am following the link to integrate One Drive SDK into an existing iOS app. I have an free account created on azure portal. Its a work account so I can see a default Azure Active Directory.
During this process, I need to register the app on the Azure portal. This link for registering apps and generating app ID does not work in my case.
I am unable to create an app ID or access existing active Azure Directory details. The portal shows me restricted access page as mentioned in this link : https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/answers/questions/352443/microsoft-azure-free-trial-no-access-to-acitive-di.html. The solutions mentioned in this link does not work for me as those options are not seen on the screen.
Any kind of help in understanding the trouble will be of great help!
This might be due to insuffient permissions as this is a free trial account.
Go to your Overview pane of your subscription and check if there are any directories present.
If not try creating a free trial account using a Work or school account and there you will be provided with a default directory. Then Create new Azure AD Tenant and then Connect your Azure free subscription to your new Azure AD Directory.
REFERENCES:
Associate a subscription to a directory.
Create a new tenant for your organization.
I'm currently developing a gmail add-on and am hoping to allow a few users internal to my team to test out the add-on prior to a public release. I was following the documentation here from google that states
You can allow other users to test the add-on by sharing the Apps Script project with their account (read access is required) and then prompting the users to follow the above steps.
I assume that 'read' access is equivalent to 'view' access, and have given a user 'view' access to the project.
The problem I'm running into is that even with 'view' permissions, users aren't able to do a test deployment and install the add-on to their gmail account. The blue 'Deploy' button simply isn't visible. Any ideas on how to get my add-on into a few users hands before publishing, but without giving them edit privileges?
One way to do it is to have the users copy your script and deploy it.
Another is to publish the Add-On privately and you would have control over what version of the Add-On your test users are seeing. For this your users should be of the same Google Workspace domain
I'd like to to create a test adwords client account so I can use it for adwords API calls with a pending developer token.
I have followed the steps in the doc in this link and successfully created a test manager account (with the red label) using the Google Ads UI.
As required, I did that with a different google id than the one I used for the production manager account.
Then it says in the doc "While logged in to Google Ads as your test manager account, any client accounts you create will automatically be test accounts."
But for me those clients accounts were created as production. No red label, and requesting for budget.
Any idea what am I doing wrong, or an alternative way to create a client test account?
Appreciate your help,
Tal
After getting some help from Google Ads API team (see thread here) the answer is:
Create a google adwords manager test account, see here how to
Create a google adwords client test account from within that manager account, see here how to
And then, even if you get the billing error message, and you don't see any client accounts created, it's actually there, but hidden. To show it, enable the 'Canceled accounts' checkbox, as seen here:
I want to use Microsoft Graph to send our company mobile app push notifications as discussed at Microsoft Build 2019.
I am following Integrate with Microsoft Graph notifications. It directs me to create a "Developer Account" to use the Partner Portal but my company already has an Enterprise Azure account with Microsoft and we leverage Azure AD.
I've tried the "Onboard" step but then I read "To get started, sign in to the Partner Center dashboard using your Windows developer account (you cannot use an Azure AD account)". I'm very confused.
Also, the Partner Portal shows no items under the menu no matter how I signed in. I tried using a personal account and my AAD account and I get the same result. No menu items at all.
I'm not sure where you're getting a "Developer Account" from but the first step is registering your application. This gives you an Application Id and Secret which is required to authenticate against Graph:
In order for your application service to integrate with Microsoft Graph notifications, you need to register your app with the Microsoft identity platform to support Microsoft accounts or work or school accounts, and declare the API permissions that are required.
With regards to the windows developer account, this is explained in the documentation:
If you don’t already have a Windows developer account, you’ll need to create one. For details, see Opening a developer account. You need to do this even if you don’t plan to build a Windows UWP application. If you’re building a school or work application as part of an enterprise, you can associate your developer account with the appropriate Azure AD account that is used for managing your enterprise submissions. For details, see Associate Azure Active Directory with your Partner Center account.
I have a virtual environment running on azure, and have installed and setup TFS correctly.
However I would like to know how I can give access to my project by using a hotmail account, or for example invite someone to the team which does not have a user in the active directory? I hope this is possible! :)
If you're using on-premise TFS hosted in Azure, you can't. User accounts are backed by AD/Windows security, plain and simple.
If you're using Team Services, you can use any email address you want and they can sign that email address up to be a Microsoft account, if it isn't already.