Teams has had a lot of big adds in the past year: Mesh, Copilot, the transition of Live Events to Town Halls, the integration with Microsoft Defender XDR, and so much more. The cadence is as rapid and exciting as ever. And when we see these big ticket items released, it is also quite natural to wonder: these are awesome, but hey, what is going on with that unresolved or underdeveloped item I keep feeding back about and which appears to be lost in the backlog? Busy on busy was like that. And so was the correction for pinning messages. It's fair to say that most of them do come in the end. And for old die-hard Teams lovers like me, it's a big deal that one of the longest unresolved features in Teams history has finally been shipped - this is the ability for everyone in a channel meeting to receive a personal invite. Now, this has been problematic for years - I mean I can remember articles on tech community as far back as 2018/2019 and if you look around online there are some quite complex ones which delve deep into the Microsoft 365 admin settings and all. My personal opinion? People shouldn't have to subscribe to groups or anything like that. It should just work. It's a meeting. Those who are in the channel ought to be invited to it just like any other meeting. So now we can - in classic or Teams 2.1. And whilst this will be a very short blog, it's a really useful one, because it may instill confidence in those who shun channel meetings because they never knew whether attendees will receive an invite in their personal calendar, or if they would show up. Better late than never right? You bet.