• @[email protected]
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    281 year ago

    I don’t think people realize how much corporate policies affect their Teams experience. A lot of complaints I hear are not things I see in my experience because our Teams isn’t strangled by corporate policies.

    • aard
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      281 year ago

      Vanilla teams is a a stinking pile of shit. Corporate policies just add a bit of bonus nuclear waste to that.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      Wow, no, fuck no. Is there a corporate policy that makes this piece of shit intentionally buggy? For months I’ve had a blank white window on Mac that remains the whole time I use the app. Generally, not one feature of the app works without some kind of glitch or 5. Emojis are fucking broken half the time… Because that’s a complicated totally unsolved problem across the industry /s

      What exactly are you using? It’s definitely not teams if you think it’s a passable app. I’ve said it’s alpha software because that’s absolutely what it’s always felt like to me. It’s gotten 10% better in the 3 years I’ve used it. One of the worst apps of all time.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Interesting take. I’ve been using teams for a few years now since that’s what most of my customers use. I can’t say I’ve experienced any bugs or any of the issues you’re sharing.

        Only thing I can think of it’s related to Mac and their version of teams. The app for windows seems to work flawlessly.

        • Cassa
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          41 year ago

          Now I wonder why the mac version would be a subpar product…

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          We are a mostly mac shop, but I don’t see that as an excuse actually. Also, we have windows users in our company and also I’ve used the web version and it’s atrocious too. Everyone at my company that ever mentions a Teams opinion hates it…

        • @[email protected]
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          31 year ago

          I use it on Windows and I’ve encountered a few bugs, though haven’t experienced many of the stories seen in here. I’ve experienced notifications not coming through which is kinda essential for me tbh, have had the app crash every now and then, and regularly have a thing occur where I would put an emoji on anything and it would go away a second after causing me to do it again. The notifications not coming through is a big deal for me, the rest I can live with just fine.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Not who you’re responding to, but Teams works great in my office. I don’t love the UI, but it’s not buggy at all.

        Maybe it’s a Mac thing?

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          I mean, they support Mac, but yeah the web version is horrible and even windows users in my office hate it.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            I guess I’ve just been lucky with it. I only use it on my windows laptops and Android phones, where it’s been pretty flawless.

            Though I do work with people in other organizations that have more restrictive permissions applied to Teams from their IT department that make it more difficult to get anything done.

    • @[email protected]
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      131 year ago

      Is corporate services what’s causing activity badges to constantly have wrong numbers on them within the app?

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Which corporate policy is it that causes the website to default to classic Teams even though your company has switched to v2 Teams? I don’t know why I can’t just log in to v2 instead of having to switch every time.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      I don’t have a lot of the issues I see others complaining about, but my teams does randomly shut down and I don’t notice until someone sends me an email saying they tried to reach me on teams. Doesn’t seem like that has anything to do with corporate policy.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    Old man: “So my daughter says you are tech guy?”

    Young man: “I am tech guy for thing you don’t like”

    Old man: “I am going to kill you now.”

    -this image macro and all future permutations transcribed simultaneously by lemming-to-normie translation AI

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I don’t even know man. I used to click a teams link and teams would pop up. Now a splash screen for “new” teams comes up and none of my programmable mouse shortcuts work and it seems like sometimes it launches through a browser, other times it doesn’t. I have personal and two work accounts which makes things complex too.

    Edit; oh, and if I click on teams icon it says do you want to use “new teams” or “classic teams”? If I click on classic a brief screen pops up and in small print it says classic teams died in March of 2023 - Rip. Then the whole app just shuts down. It feels very amateur.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      god you’d think these fly by night open source hippies would commit to their ideals a little more, you know? the only real option is paid software maintained by full time employees who get fucking paychecks. nothing else is ever gonna work outside of your weird Foss imagination land. ‘Microsoft’ was a cute dream, but it just isnt sustainable.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      Apparently the prompt for asking is triggered because the “new” version is a different executable than the shortcut you’re using is pointing to. So you could fix that by creating a new shortcut.

      Another fix would be to get rid of Teams, but when you’re on a corporate license there’s not much we can do about that

    • Guy Ingonito
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      251 year ago

      I genuinely would love an opportunity to scream at the people who decided to release new versions of teams and outlook.

  • @[email protected]
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    141 year ago

    Am I the only one on Lemmy who uses Teams every day and basically has no issues? It’s not perfect, but I much prefer it over SfB, Lync, G2M, WebEx, Zoom & RingCentral.

    I feel like people who hate Teams never had to suffer through Skype for Business, which truly was one of the worst pieces of software I’ve ever used in my life. It used the layout engine from WORD to render chat windows. It had an unsynchronized mobile client that 9/10 never received messages unless it was open while the person sent it. It was hell.

    Most of Teams’ problems stem from it being an Electron app that aggressively caches everything, which new Teams actually solves so I’m pretty happy with it. I also have to support users of it for our org too, so I don’t just use it constantly I also have to fix it if it breaks, so it’s not just lack of awareness of common issues.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Why does Teams break my wireless headset (which I’m required to use for my job) half the time and half the time it’s fine? That’s one of my biggest gripes with it tbh. Our IT department couldn’t figure it out. I’ll open teams and suddenly my headset stops working and it fixes itself when I close Teams. The browser client version of the app doesn’t seem to do this though thankfully.

    • eatham 🇦🇺
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      31 year ago

      It is lack of awareness, the users don’t report most problems to you. If they did, you wouldn’t have time to do anything but read the problems. I don’t report to IT every bug that annoys me in teams, because they can’t do shit about it and it would take hours for me to list them

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Yeah that would make sense if I also didn’t have to use it all day every day.

        Also just because you don’t report issues, doesn’t mean others don’t. I never said it was perfect, far from it. But it’s as good or better than many alternatives.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Sometimes it messes up my status and says I’m idle when I’m working on a second screen and also sometimes doesn’t notify me about messages but I still think it’s alright

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Yeah, I’ve found it funky but usable. Unfortunately they resolved a bug where you always show online if you’re on a laptop in balanced power mode and it’s plugged in lol. That was a great feature

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      My God Skype for Business was so bad. Nowadays I prefer zoom or even a slack hangout, but anything is better than Skype for Business.

    • DaGeek247
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      11 year ago

      It’s fine for features. The UI design reminds me of phone apps; you have to guess what the symbol means rather than using actual text, but for the most part it does it’s job of facilitating office communications. Files are a bitch, but i don’t have to use those in teams too often.

      My hate stems from its godawful search, and the fact that it struggles to load goddamn text. I swear to god i can count the seconds for each scroll upwards and i hate it.

  • @[email protected]
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    361 year ago

    Microsoft has become really effective at developing malware like Windows, edge, teams, etc and selling it to corporations to spy on employees and contractors

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      It’s this. They don’t care if you, the user, don’t like it anymore. That’s irrelevant to MSoft. The big corpo dollars are all they pay attention to. And it’s really easy to sell a c suite and middle managers on their new click counter 3000 embedded in the next version of teams. Any way to monitor the employees and show useless metrics without having to actually do their jobs.

  • @[email protected]
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    631 year ago

    Honestly, I think that anyone who is this angry about Microsoft products needs to spend some time working with the types of industrial software that makes the manufacturing world go round. Just to get some perspective on what truly God awful software actually looks like.

    • @[email protected]
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      141 year ago

      I’ve used fully functional chat applications, and I’ve used Microsoft Teams.

      Teams is so bad it seems intentional

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        Everything is relative. Teams is a shining beacon of competency when compared to a lot of the utter shit software and firmware that I end up having to deal with.

    • Toes♀
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      211 year ago

      Yummy visual basic apps that have been dragged into the modern era kicking and screaming

      • jawa21
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        41 year ago

        Why are ERP systems always shit for everyone involved? I’ve yet to see one that didn’t warrant a full time position just to clean it up and fix it when it inevitably breaks. Epicor was the worst offender I have seen.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      don’t forget all the crapware foisted off on small businesses – point-of-sale systems designed for Windows XP and the company’s gone belly-up but you can’t switch because all of your data is locked in – manufacturing hardware with proprietary EISA cards and drivers for Windows 98 and there’s not enough installs to justify reverse engineering …

      • 🐍🩶🐢
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        31 year ago

        I am so glad my new job had sense to say no. Their cost benefit analysis pretty much said the amount of pain, man hours, and bullshit it would cost to run far outweighed the higher price of the alternative product they went with.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          the higher price of the alternative product

          Good lord, you mean there’s something out there more expensive than SAP?

    • @[email protected]
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      221 year ago

      My brother in Christ, IRC is a better tool.

      Microsoft is failing to meet minimum standards of usability that has existed since the 80s

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        With the exception of the great split. And the freenode fiasco. IRC have been consistently fantastic for me since i logged on in ~93

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        You mean usability like nick collision, channel takeovers, absence of services, no support for media or files, disagreements in the community that lead to multiple separated IRC networks, fully visible client IPs, the joke the ident protocol was?

        I understand not liking teams, or webex, or zoom. But IRC in the 80s is hardly an shining beacon of usability or standards.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          There are modern IRC clients like TheLounge and Convos that support media and video. And push messages. You can also have your own internal server not exposed to the internet, this eliminating the problems of takeover, splits and whatnot…

          Also the protocol has evolved and there’s been integrated options in the servers to hide IPs for at the least a decade.

          You may remember those issues and problems when you abandoned it, but it contniues to evolve and endure. I have a private server for my friends and it’s been the most stable and direct way to chat and share images for years.

          Edit: I have not tested the video stuff in Convos. I use TheLounge and it’s perfectly capable of taking an mp4 to upload on the server and display it in the chat. I share images daily by uploading them from my IRC client and they are displayed in the chat… it’s not just text anymore!

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            I have no doubt there are improved clients. But that is the problem. IRC is not standardized at all. Different clients give different results. Also, we are talking about IRC in the 80s, not today.

            That’s very far away from good usability.

            Original IRC also used 8bit text, so no unicode. Note I did not say ASCII, because IRC did not even defined encodings. Do you remember the pain of different Code pages on computers?

            IRC as a protocol was basically a dumpster fire that somehow worked.

            Don’t get me wrong, I loved IRC (using irssi on bash mostly). But I wouldn’t praise it for usability. At all. And I would never pretend IRC set standards for usability in the 80s.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        I’m talking software/firmware in general, not just chat clients/protocols. As I said, you seem to need some perspective.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          Lol, this is such an absurd line of reasoning.

          “This problem was solved in the 80s and then Microsoft bullied an inferior product into business space, and it impacts my work every single day”

          And your response is “eat shit, some people have it worse?”

          This isn’t the fucking pain Olympics and you don’t get a fucking medal for working on a worse stack.

          This is a wildly toxic mindset and I promise your entire life will start to get better once you ditch it.

          Edit:

          Also, you seem to be missing a crucial element here. It’s not that, like in your situation, things were bad and are still equally bad.

          This is the situation where things were good, and then made worse. Completely different trendline.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            Wait, so me saying that Teams is not that bad relatively speaking is a toxic mindset? You do see the irony of flying handle at me to say that, right?

            Edit: Deleted duplicate

            • @[email protected]
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              101 year ago

              “working with teams isn’t as bad as working with some software in a completely different domain”

              Apples and oranges, reeks of “You can’t be cold because I live in Canada” energy, but ok, whatever.

              “You need perspective”

              Extremely condescending. Enforces the notion that nobody can dream of better things as long as other people (you specifically) see themselves are enduring something worse.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Seriously. It’s not even the worst videoconferencing/chat tool, let alone all the other industries that thrive on barely usable software. Healthcare software, for example.

      If all you’ve ever used is phone software that’s either made to as frictionless as possible to gather as much data from you as possible, then I can see hating Teams. If anything, Teams is a victim of its own success. Everyone hated the bloat in Outlook which now looks stripped down by comparison, because Teams is clearly the MS golden child and if you want your project to live at MS it needs to connect to Teams in some way.

  • @[email protected]
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    631 year ago

    I once worked for an organization that maintained a 10+ year old single excel file with no discernable backups for regulatory data.

    The bar is low.

    • @[email protected]
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      121 year ago

      I had a client as of a couple of years ago with a custom fronted software build on top of an access mdb database running on windows 98 continuously since 2000. They had been backing it up onto a 18 year old 1GB flash drive every night for years. Their interest was exactly zero in upgrading to anything newer.

      • Joe Cool
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        11 year ago

        I got called to a 12 year old server with a failed HDD once. They said no problem we have a daily backup. Just put in a new drive and restore from tape.
        The tape wouldn’t read. I took it out of the drive and noticed some brown specs and dust falling out. The tape was clear, like scotch tape. They backed up daily to the same tape for over 10 years without verification. The remnants of the magnetic layer was scattered inside the drive. That client became pretty sad pretty fast.

    • BeardedSingleMalt
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      321 year ago

      I once got called in to diagnose why it took 5 minutes to open up a single Excel file. The PC itself was a little dated and underpowered, but the file size was huuuge…like hundreds of MB.

      It finally opened. There was ugly table-formatting…to the entire spreadsheet. Colored cell borders, alternating background fill, text and font formatting applied to every single cell; columns A-IV and rows 1-65,536. I pointed that out and said the only way to fix is start a new one and not apply the formatting, or to try and remove it from all the cells. She outright refused because she liked the way it was. So I left, and she went back to looking at pictures of her cats

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        People do silly things. We have a department at work which pulls data from our ERP system to excel. They’re pulling 10’s of thousands of rows to return only a few bits of detail like product descriptions for a handful of items. I’ve offered to help them but they really don’t want help. They seem to be happy with this monster.

        There’s another department which runs reports from our BI system, exports it to Excel, adds some calculations, then builds reports from that. They literally just need to ask the BI analyst to build them a report to their requirements.

        I’m convinced people like screwing around in excel because it gives them something creative to do in an otherwise bland job.

  • @[email protected]
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    311 year ago

    Every update, some thing breaks. The “new” Teams does not work well with the microphone on my work laptop, I’ve had to resort to using headphones. The interface just sucks too. I hate that the left pane auto-hides now. So inconvenient. It’s not just Teams too. Every part of Office has broken for us during previous updates. I miss the times when Windows was just an OS for the most part and MS was not trying hard to be Apple.

    • Saik0
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      101 year ago

      Web based teams has worked better than app based teams for years on all of my computers. I haven’t touched the app in a long time at this point because i just gave up on it.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        A customer wanted to used Teams couple of days ago, I couldn’t make it work on my companies laptop, trying three different browers. I just loaded an empty white page.

        I had to use a laptop from another customer, that also use Teams, to do so, which worked, but gave me toothache, in terms of security.

        Both laptops where on the same network and both ran Debian and I tried the same browsers, without any plugins and jitsi-meet works fine on my companies laptop. So apparently the system need to be specially configured for Teams to work.

        I am staying with jitsi-meet, thank you very much.

        The customer, I got the laptop from, knew what they did and provided managed Linux Systems for people to be able to use Teams.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      if you like a feature that ms software has, and can’t bear to part with it, the only option is open source.

  • @[email protected]
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    831 year ago

    I haaaate Teams. Worst thing ever to happen to workplace productivity. And (unless this has been fixed since I retired) chat history isn’t persistent past 6 months so you lose your proof of what was discussed, unlike email.

    • @[email protected]
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      121 year ago

      The chat history is the big one for me. It’s not even that it’s not persistent; I’d be fine if it just purged all messages after a set period. The problem is that it seems to selectively purge some messages but keep others. Makes me feel like I’m crazy when I go back and try to find something that I know I sent a while ago, but there’s just a gap.

      • @[email protected]
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        101 year ago

        That’s probably some kind of data policies that your company has put in place. Default teams chat history is forever.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      unlike email

      Yeah, that’s unfortunately a thing, too. It’s the one size fits all solution to data protection and security. Made by people who like to make their own life easier, no matter the cost to everyone else. The GDPR does not allow us to store personal data indefinitely without reason, so let’s automatically delete every email without exception, no matter if it is still for an ongoing project or not.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      Chat history is forever by default and has been for years so far as I know, anything else is a company policy. People don’t appreciate how much control their company has over the experience.

    • @[email protected]
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      581 year ago

      unlike email.

      Once worked a job in the financial sector, they enforced all Outlook clients to purge emails 3 months old AND disabled all of outlooks built-in archival tools…

      Those bitches didn’t disable VBA though, so I built my own Outlook archival tool all in VBA complete with an sqlite DB and a UI. Ironically, it was more stable and less susceptible to corruption than outlooks own tools lolol

        • @[email protected]
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          271 year ago

          Oh it for sure was, a year or 2 before I was hired they got hit with a regulation violation (not sure which anymore, I think it was Reg B) and then a few months after that this outlook policy conveniently came into effect to “minimize impact from a data breach” lmao

    • @[email protected]
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      351 year ago

      To me, this is its biggest flaw. You can’t scroll back in chats very far, but you can search for lines further back. However in a truly spectacular display of uselessness, the search only returns the chat bubble you searched for, with no surrounding context.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        From my experience, discord might have one of the best chat searches out there. It’s stupid fast and you can search metadata like time, sender, attachments, etc.

      • @[email protected]
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        151 year ago

        oh my god this drives me absolutely nuts when I’m looking for help I received months ago and distinctly remember enough to put into a search bar but can’t go back to the actual conversation… even though it is clearly saved somewhere since it still comes up in search!!!

  • @[email protected]
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    141 year ago

    Why has Teams for GNU/Linux been discontinued, you bastard?

    (yes, there’s an unofficial client thankfully)

      • voxel
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        31 year ago

        isn’t it literally just a wrapper around the browser version? don’t see how browser usage might be allowed but not this

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          If it’s just a wrapper around the browser version, why not just use the browser version directly? Chrome (and probably other browsers) let you “install” sites so they have their own icon on the desktop and launcher, and launch it in a separate window. You just need to ensure you check the “open in new Window” option when creating the shortcut.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          Surprisingly, I can’t get my webcam to work on Teams from FF or Chromium but it just works on this wrapper.

  • @[email protected]
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    51 year ago

    I’ve been in companies that use Teams and companies that use Slack. The difference was people actually used Slack outside their core team channels. Teams was nearly a ghost town in the wider organization. I felt that was solid evidence that people only used Teams because they had to. They also had to use Slack, but they also kind of liked it.