Microsoft's Walkie Talkie experience is coming to Teams phones

Microsoft Teams Phones
Microsoft Teams Phones (Image credit: Microsoft)

What you need to know

  • Microsoft is bringing its Walkie Talkie app to Teams phones.
  • It works like a regular walkie talkie, wherein you have to press and hold a button to be heard.
  • The feature's Teams phone availability is in development.

Microsoft's walkie talkie feature for Teams has already been around for months on Android, but it's now coming to Teams phones. If you're wondering what Teams phones are, they're third-party phones built with specific Teams optimizations in mind, such as displays. Now, they can join in the walkie talkie fun.

As can be seen on Microsoft's 365 roadmap, where all good Teams updates are found, the company has decided it is finally time for Teams phones to get all the fun of pressing a button and holding it in order to talk.

Here's how Microsoft describes its feature: "Like traditional walkie talkies, the Walkie Talkie app on your Teams phones provides an instant push-to-talk (PTT) communication for your team. It allows you to press and hold a button to speak to your team, and release the button to listen. Users can connect with their team using the Teams channels."

Microsoft does not describe the secondary benefits of the walkie talkie feature, wherein you can make "bzzt" noises and say "over" at the end of every sentence, but rest assured: That functionality is there, should you choose to make the noises and speak the words yourself.

The feature's Teams phones availability is still in development and is set to be so until September 2021, according to the current tentative date on the roadmap. Remember, though, that those dates are set to change at any time, so Teams phones' walkie talkie capabilities could come sooner or later.

Robert Carnevale

Robert Carnevale is the News Editor for Windows Central. He's a big fan of Kinect (it lives on in his heart), Sonic the Hedgehog, and the legendary intersection of those two titans, Sonic Free Riders. He is the author of Cold War 2395. Have a useful tip? Send it to robert.carnevale@futurenet.com.