Google Meet permanent room












2















When we start a meeting we get a meeting URL like meet.google.com/xxx-yyyy-zzz. Is there a way to get a customized and/or permanent meeting URL?



Even "customized" is an optional one, the requirement is to create a permanent room so that anyone can join that room without having the unique URL. This is very much useful when you have a recurrent meeting or a quick get-together. Any idea?










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migrated from superuser.com Jan 21 at 16:34


This question came from our site for computer enthusiasts and power users.























    2















    When we start a meeting we get a meeting URL like meet.google.com/xxx-yyyy-zzz. Is there a way to get a customized and/or permanent meeting URL?



    Even "customized" is an optional one, the requirement is to create a permanent room so that anyone can join that room without having the unique URL. This is very much useful when you have a recurrent meeting or a quick get-together. Any idea?










    share|improve this question















    migrated from superuser.com Jan 21 at 16:34


    This question came from our site for computer enthusiasts and power users.





















      2












      2








      2








      When we start a meeting we get a meeting URL like meet.google.com/xxx-yyyy-zzz. Is there a way to get a customized and/or permanent meeting URL?



      Even "customized" is an optional one, the requirement is to create a permanent room so that anyone can join that room without having the unique URL. This is very much useful when you have a recurrent meeting or a quick get-together. Any idea?










      share|improve this question
















      When we start a meeting we get a meeting URL like meet.google.com/xxx-yyyy-zzz. Is there a way to get a customized and/or permanent meeting URL?



      Even "customized" is an optional one, the requirement is to create a permanent room so that anyone can join that room without having the unique URL. This is very much useful when you have a recurrent meeting or a quick get-together. Any idea?







      g-suite google-meet






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 21 at 18:30









      Rubén

      27.4k635169




      27.4k635169










      asked Jan 21 at 15:59









      Jimson Kannanthara JamesJimson Kannanthara James

      1134




      1134




      migrated from superuser.com Jan 21 at 16:34


      This question came from our site for computer enthusiasts and power users.









      migrated from superuser.com Jan 21 at 16:34


      This question came from our site for computer enthusiasts and power users.
























          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          3















          • go to https://bitly.com/

          • create a free account

          • click on that orange button CREATE

          • select BITLINK

          • paste your meeting URL

          • customize it as you wish (example: bit.ly/lets-meet-now)

          • click on SAVE button


          1






          share|improve this answer


























          • That's an intriguing solution. Are there any prerequisites such as registered or paid accounts that are needed for such a customised link?

            – Mokubai
            Jan 21 at 17:14











          • @Mokubai no need for a paid premium account on bitly to create a custom link. the free account is more than sufficient to handle it.

            – MARK MY ANSWER
            Jan 21 at 17:19











          • I have done perm (or to be more precise, name-my-link) links on other services without an account. But while .ly is a fun "adverb extension", it is also under control of the government of Libya. You know, Muammar Khadafy, Benghazi, that Lybia. The security implications of that are unnerving.

            – Harper
            Jan 21 at 21:21











          • @Harper The root servers connect a user to the server that the website is hosted on. But those servers don't always physically exist in the countries their TLDs are assigned to. Sites with the .ly TLD have five root servers, but only two are based in Libya: The other two are located in Oregon, and one is in the Netherlands. For a site like bit.ly with a .ly TLD, all five of the root servers would need to go down at the same time for access to the site to be restricted. It's nerdy, but integral to understanding why bit.ly kept chugging along when the Libyan government killed the Internet.

            – MARK MY ANSWER
            Jan 21 at 21:27













          • @Harper Even if all five of the root servers were somehow taken offline, users could still access the site through the alternative j.mp or bitly.com, a bit.ly spokesman said. Every bit.ly short URL also exists as a separate bitly.com page. Since the company's .com and .mp sites use alternate TLDs, they would be unaffected by the fact that .ly sites were down.

            – MARK MY ANSWER
            Jan 21 at 21:28



















          2














          Google Meet meetings URL are permanent. Just save it on a safe place.



          Tip: Use Google Calendar to create a recurrent meeting.



          NOTE: If you created a non-recurring event using Google Meet, you could use the same Google Meet meeting URL.






          share|improve this answer























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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes








            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            3















            • go to https://bitly.com/

            • create a free account

            • click on that orange button CREATE

            • select BITLINK

            • paste your meeting URL

            • customize it as you wish (example: bit.ly/lets-meet-now)

            • click on SAVE button


            1






            share|improve this answer


























            • That's an intriguing solution. Are there any prerequisites such as registered or paid accounts that are needed for such a customised link?

              – Mokubai
              Jan 21 at 17:14











            • @Mokubai no need for a paid premium account on bitly to create a custom link. the free account is more than sufficient to handle it.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 17:19











            • I have done perm (or to be more precise, name-my-link) links on other services without an account. But while .ly is a fun "adverb extension", it is also under control of the government of Libya. You know, Muammar Khadafy, Benghazi, that Lybia. The security implications of that are unnerving.

              – Harper
              Jan 21 at 21:21











            • @Harper The root servers connect a user to the server that the website is hosted on. But those servers don't always physically exist in the countries their TLDs are assigned to. Sites with the .ly TLD have five root servers, but only two are based in Libya: The other two are located in Oregon, and one is in the Netherlands. For a site like bit.ly with a .ly TLD, all five of the root servers would need to go down at the same time for access to the site to be restricted. It's nerdy, but integral to understanding why bit.ly kept chugging along when the Libyan government killed the Internet.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 21:27













            • @Harper Even if all five of the root servers were somehow taken offline, users could still access the site through the alternative j.mp or bitly.com, a bit.ly spokesman said. Every bit.ly short URL also exists as a separate bitly.com page. Since the company's .com and .mp sites use alternate TLDs, they would be unaffected by the fact that .ly sites were down.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 21:28
















            3















            • go to https://bitly.com/

            • create a free account

            • click on that orange button CREATE

            • select BITLINK

            • paste your meeting URL

            • customize it as you wish (example: bit.ly/lets-meet-now)

            • click on SAVE button


            1






            share|improve this answer


























            • That's an intriguing solution. Are there any prerequisites such as registered or paid accounts that are needed for such a customised link?

              – Mokubai
              Jan 21 at 17:14











            • @Mokubai no need for a paid premium account on bitly to create a custom link. the free account is more than sufficient to handle it.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 17:19











            • I have done perm (or to be more precise, name-my-link) links on other services without an account. But while .ly is a fun "adverb extension", it is also under control of the government of Libya. You know, Muammar Khadafy, Benghazi, that Lybia. The security implications of that are unnerving.

              – Harper
              Jan 21 at 21:21











            • @Harper The root servers connect a user to the server that the website is hosted on. But those servers don't always physically exist in the countries their TLDs are assigned to. Sites with the .ly TLD have five root servers, but only two are based in Libya: The other two are located in Oregon, and one is in the Netherlands. For a site like bit.ly with a .ly TLD, all five of the root servers would need to go down at the same time for access to the site to be restricted. It's nerdy, but integral to understanding why bit.ly kept chugging along when the Libyan government killed the Internet.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 21:27













            • @Harper Even if all five of the root servers were somehow taken offline, users could still access the site through the alternative j.mp or bitly.com, a bit.ly spokesman said. Every bit.ly short URL also exists as a separate bitly.com page. Since the company's .com and .mp sites use alternate TLDs, they would be unaffected by the fact that .ly sites were down.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 21:28














            3












            3








            3








            • go to https://bitly.com/

            • create a free account

            • click on that orange button CREATE

            • select BITLINK

            • paste your meeting URL

            • customize it as you wish (example: bit.ly/lets-meet-now)

            • click on SAVE button


            1






            share|improve this answer
















            • go to https://bitly.com/

            • create a free account

            • click on that orange button CREATE

            • select BITLINK

            • paste your meeting URL

            • customize it as you wish (example: bit.ly/lets-meet-now)

            • click on SAVE button


            1







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Jan 21 at 21:34

























            answered Jan 21 at 16:55









            MARK MY ANSWERMARK MY ANSWER

            6,27041129




            6,27041129













            • That's an intriguing solution. Are there any prerequisites such as registered or paid accounts that are needed for such a customised link?

              – Mokubai
              Jan 21 at 17:14











            • @Mokubai no need for a paid premium account on bitly to create a custom link. the free account is more than sufficient to handle it.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 17:19











            • I have done perm (or to be more precise, name-my-link) links on other services without an account. But while .ly is a fun "adverb extension", it is also under control of the government of Libya. You know, Muammar Khadafy, Benghazi, that Lybia. The security implications of that are unnerving.

              – Harper
              Jan 21 at 21:21











            • @Harper The root servers connect a user to the server that the website is hosted on. But those servers don't always physically exist in the countries their TLDs are assigned to. Sites with the .ly TLD have five root servers, but only two are based in Libya: The other two are located in Oregon, and one is in the Netherlands. For a site like bit.ly with a .ly TLD, all five of the root servers would need to go down at the same time for access to the site to be restricted. It's nerdy, but integral to understanding why bit.ly kept chugging along when the Libyan government killed the Internet.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 21:27













            • @Harper Even if all five of the root servers were somehow taken offline, users could still access the site through the alternative j.mp or bitly.com, a bit.ly spokesman said. Every bit.ly short URL also exists as a separate bitly.com page. Since the company's .com and .mp sites use alternate TLDs, they would be unaffected by the fact that .ly sites were down.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 21:28



















            • That's an intriguing solution. Are there any prerequisites such as registered or paid accounts that are needed for such a customised link?

              – Mokubai
              Jan 21 at 17:14











            • @Mokubai no need for a paid premium account on bitly to create a custom link. the free account is more than sufficient to handle it.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 17:19











            • I have done perm (or to be more precise, name-my-link) links on other services without an account. But while .ly is a fun "adverb extension", it is also under control of the government of Libya. You know, Muammar Khadafy, Benghazi, that Lybia. The security implications of that are unnerving.

              – Harper
              Jan 21 at 21:21











            • @Harper The root servers connect a user to the server that the website is hosted on. But those servers don't always physically exist in the countries their TLDs are assigned to. Sites with the .ly TLD have five root servers, but only two are based in Libya: The other two are located in Oregon, and one is in the Netherlands. For a site like bit.ly with a .ly TLD, all five of the root servers would need to go down at the same time for access to the site to be restricted. It's nerdy, but integral to understanding why bit.ly kept chugging along when the Libyan government killed the Internet.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 21:27













            • @Harper Even if all five of the root servers were somehow taken offline, users could still access the site through the alternative j.mp or bitly.com, a bit.ly spokesman said. Every bit.ly short URL also exists as a separate bitly.com page. Since the company's .com and .mp sites use alternate TLDs, they would be unaffected by the fact that .ly sites were down.

              – MARK MY ANSWER
              Jan 21 at 21:28

















            That's an intriguing solution. Are there any prerequisites such as registered or paid accounts that are needed for such a customised link?

            – Mokubai
            Jan 21 at 17:14





            That's an intriguing solution. Are there any prerequisites such as registered or paid accounts that are needed for such a customised link?

            – Mokubai
            Jan 21 at 17:14













            @Mokubai no need for a paid premium account on bitly to create a custom link. the free account is more than sufficient to handle it.

            – MARK MY ANSWER
            Jan 21 at 17:19





            @Mokubai no need for a paid premium account on bitly to create a custom link. the free account is more than sufficient to handle it.

            – MARK MY ANSWER
            Jan 21 at 17:19













            I have done perm (or to be more precise, name-my-link) links on other services without an account. But while .ly is a fun "adverb extension", it is also under control of the government of Libya. You know, Muammar Khadafy, Benghazi, that Lybia. The security implications of that are unnerving.

            – Harper
            Jan 21 at 21:21





            I have done perm (or to be more precise, name-my-link) links on other services without an account. But while .ly is a fun "adverb extension", it is also under control of the government of Libya. You know, Muammar Khadafy, Benghazi, that Lybia. The security implications of that are unnerving.

            – Harper
            Jan 21 at 21:21













            @Harper The root servers connect a user to the server that the website is hosted on. But those servers don't always physically exist in the countries their TLDs are assigned to. Sites with the .ly TLD have five root servers, but only two are based in Libya: The other two are located in Oregon, and one is in the Netherlands. For a site like bit.ly with a .ly TLD, all five of the root servers would need to go down at the same time for access to the site to be restricted. It's nerdy, but integral to understanding why bit.ly kept chugging along when the Libyan government killed the Internet.

            – MARK MY ANSWER
            Jan 21 at 21:27







            @Harper The root servers connect a user to the server that the website is hosted on. But those servers don't always physically exist in the countries their TLDs are assigned to. Sites with the .ly TLD have five root servers, but only two are based in Libya: The other two are located in Oregon, and one is in the Netherlands. For a site like bit.ly with a .ly TLD, all five of the root servers would need to go down at the same time for access to the site to be restricted. It's nerdy, but integral to understanding why bit.ly kept chugging along when the Libyan government killed the Internet.

            – MARK MY ANSWER
            Jan 21 at 21:27















            @Harper Even if all five of the root servers were somehow taken offline, users could still access the site through the alternative j.mp or bitly.com, a bit.ly spokesman said. Every bit.ly short URL also exists as a separate bitly.com page. Since the company's .com and .mp sites use alternate TLDs, they would be unaffected by the fact that .ly sites were down.

            – MARK MY ANSWER
            Jan 21 at 21:28





            @Harper Even if all five of the root servers were somehow taken offline, users could still access the site through the alternative j.mp or bitly.com, a bit.ly spokesman said. Every bit.ly short URL also exists as a separate bitly.com page. Since the company's .com and .mp sites use alternate TLDs, they would be unaffected by the fact that .ly sites were down.

            – MARK MY ANSWER
            Jan 21 at 21:28













            2














            Google Meet meetings URL are permanent. Just save it on a safe place.



            Tip: Use Google Calendar to create a recurrent meeting.



            NOTE: If you created a non-recurring event using Google Meet, you could use the same Google Meet meeting URL.






            share|improve this answer




























              2














              Google Meet meetings URL are permanent. Just save it on a safe place.



              Tip: Use Google Calendar to create a recurrent meeting.



              NOTE: If you created a non-recurring event using Google Meet, you could use the same Google Meet meeting URL.






              share|improve this answer


























                2












                2








                2







                Google Meet meetings URL are permanent. Just save it on a safe place.



                Tip: Use Google Calendar to create a recurrent meeting.



                NOTE: If you created a non-recurring event using Google Meet, you could use the same Google Meet meeting URL.






                share|improve this answer













                Google Meet meetings URL are permanent. Just save it on a safe place.



                Tip: Use Google Calendar to create a recurrent meeting.



                NOTE: If you created a non-recurring event using Google Meet, you could use the same Google Meet meeting URL.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Jan 21 at 18:32









                RubénRubén

                27.4k635169




                27.4k635169






























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