• Easily the worst popular messaging app out there. Even on windows the thing barely ever worked for me and hogged a bunch of system resources to boot

      As with many messaging apps only thing keeping it alive is the network effect (and integration with 365)

      • You moved your mouse near the calendar? LET ME CREATE A MEETING FOR YOU!

        You opened up a card from a planning board? LET ME TRUNCATE THE TITLE SO YOU CAN’T READ IT!

        You opened a document? HAHA CAN’T DO THAT FROM YOUR IP BUT YOU WON’T GET AN ERROR MESSAGE JUST AN INFINITELY SPINNING DOODAD!

        I wish they just copied better apps like the Microsoft of old did.

          • I have had to help so many end users with that it pains me.

            “How can I stop this from happening again?”

            Well, we can disable.other audio devices, but seeing as it’s Windows 11 they may just re-enable good luck!

            I ran into a user who’s noise cancellation stopped working upon the rollout of “New” Teams. Tried diagnosing the microphone array, settings updates, firmware. No luck.

            Know what worked? Both versions of browser based Teams!!! Ihatethemihatethemihatethem

  • Just transitioned from a Google + slack company to a Microsoft account company.

    I asked if we put our email accounts on our phones to be able to answer after hours, my supervisor said very few people are given access to emails on their phones.

    I am fine with the switch, I used to get 40-60 emails to sort through a day. Now I will be doing maybe 5-10 a day and only 3 or 4 might actually be for me and I only have an 8 hour day with no after hours meetings.

  • I tried to get our team to move to Matrix when COVID hit and there was no infrastructure for remote work.

    It was such a shame that it was that exact time Jitsi had issues with Firefox (which most of us use), so we couldn’t videochat.

    If Jitsi had that resolved immediately, we perhaps could have used something open for at least couple of years. Maybe others would follow suit.

    Oh well. Teams it is.

      • But I also harp a lot to my superiors about donating to open-source projects we utilize, make loads of money thanks to them, yet never give anything back.

        I kinda get that some projects with limited backing can’t “get their shit together”, when successful users don’t give them anything. It’s a stupid pattern, and I hope we can break it.

          •  Kurokujo   ( @Kurokujo@lemm.ee ) 
            link
            fedilink
            English
            106 months ago

            That’s not a terrible idea as long as it’s significantly cheaper than the closed alternatives. I think the biggest issue would be that orgs that pay would expect a certain level of service that a community project might not be able to deliver on.

            • Most of the small to mid size companies that I have worked for would choose a larger more established system that costs more even if it offers less over a self-hosted one that they had to pay some sort of fee for.

              Is like this weird idea in the business world that if you’re using Foss systems that it must be completely free, and that the reason why you are using it is because you are broke or cheap.

              •  Kurokujo   ( @Kurokujo@lemm.ee ) 
                link
                fedilink
                English
                56 months ago

                That’s kind of what I was getting at. Medium to large organizations usually require a certain level of reliability that closed software companies usually guarantee with dedicated support staff and SLAs. An open source project developed by the community with no dedicated support is risky from that perspective.

                If someone with the technical know-how and ability to maintain those systems offered support (red hat for example) for a lower price, many small and medium sized companies would get on board. That could also just look like a company hiring a small team to implement and maintain their own systems while contributing back to the community project.

                It’s just a much harder sell to non-technical leaders. They just want uptime guarantees and fixed costs.

                • My guess is that if you’re going to start a MSP you can do that with Foss and probably have a lot of success as long as you’ve got the sales chops to get the contracts.

                  Then you can funnel some of your customers money to foss well also increasing awareness and adoption of the better free and open source software programs

          • I don’t think that is necessary, as some companies do actually help, either with money or even dedicated staff, which can be as good or better.

            We should push for developers to promote the idea of more help towards FOSS projects, maybe find some hours a month, or send any money saved from not paying for licenses.

          • Any work tool is like that, including slack and teams. If you’re using a corporate device or tool paid for/managed by your employer, you have no privacy whatsoever. If you’re using the internet at work, IT knows at least which sites you visit

            Usually the logs/conversations don’t get read, they just have words that get flagged (from swear words to drugs to who knows what else), the rest is mainly in case something happens they can look into it more and maybe cover their ass.

            That said, I bet more data goes to microsoft from teams than goes to slack from slack, so in that case I bet slack is a bit better

    • I use Slack for personal projects and Teams for work. I think both are fine. The main reason it made sense to use Teams at work was because there were a number of products in use by different teams. IT had Slack and the rest had Zoom. Zoom was raising their costs and we already had Teams as part of 0365. So it was either buy Slack licenses for the entire company or just get everyone on Teams. It was kind of a no-brainer and it was hard to come up with a convincing argument to pay for Slack for everyone other than “Microsoft bad”.

    • The collaboration features in 365 fuck up and get in the way a lot more often than they work correctly WITH ONLY TWO CONCURRENT USERS. Conversely, I’ve seen entire classrooms in Google Docs working together like it wasn’t even a thing.

      I don’t have a lot of love for any of these companies, but what you are saying is objectively false.

    •  eatham 🇭🇲   ( @eatham@aussie.zone ) 
      link
      fedilink
      English
      3
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      Completely wrong. The Microsoft word collaboration is completly Terrible, constantly locks other people from editing even if they are on another part of the page. It really doesn’t work for more than 2 people, while you can have like 30 people on a google doc with no issues (probably more, haven’t tried more).

      Also, I blocked beehaw, why can I see your comment

  • Microsoft actively hates its users. Why are all of the keyboard shortcuts in the most inconvenient place possible? Why does Outlook not mark mail as read/unread in an intuitive way? Why does Teams schedule send require one tap on mobile but two clicks on desktop? Also this isn’t even the thread to get into whatever tf is going on with LinkedIn. Planting seeds and harvesting crops was a mistake.