The worst thing about this, to me, is that Windows Mail client, the one they're discontinuing, is a fantastic piece of software. It's simple, lean, capable, and elegantly designed. It's perfect for a novice computer user to check their email on.
The new cloud thing is worse in every way. It confusingly copies your email over from your email provider's servers onto Microsoft's servers, and then shows an ad that looks exactly like an email in the middle of all the emails. In other words, it injects spam, but the spam is special because you can't delete it. Also, it needs to run in a browser for no apparent reason. For anybody currently using Windows Mail, it's a pure downgrade.
I understand that a company running a cloud service needs to finance this service, eg with ads, but this doesn't need to be a cloud service at all. It's so extremely backward that I simply can't comprehend how it made it through all the management layers at Microsoft. If all builtin software that comes with Windows turns into a bad, ad-ridden cloud apps then that's just one more reason for people to switch to Chromebooks, right? What's next, ads in Solitaire?¹
I miss the time when Microsoft wanted to make useful software.
¹) At the risk of ruining the joke by explaining it: Microsoft already did this. They removed Solitaire from Windows and replaced it with a terrible Windows Store app which indeed is loaded to the rim with screamy animated banner ads. I assume that the PM responsible for that got promoted to the email team or something.
BiteCode_dev 25 days ago [-]
That time never existed, there were plenty of subgroups inside Microsoft that wanted to make useful software.
Plenty of people still in there that do.
But it's never been a general policicy of Microsoft that turned into actual culture and actions.
Because that would require a general vision in that direction, which would imply we would never have one version out of two of Windows (Me, Vista, 8, 11...) that looks like a prototype.
We would not have the mess of UI with thousands of toolkits, the infamous env var windows staying unusable for decades, the right click "more option" in W11 that changes theme mid-flight.
We wouldn't have had the awful windows media player that couldn't read anything without a pack of spyware installed in the 90'. Or IE6 being frozen into obsolescence. Or ads in the start menu.
Teams file sharing and chat would not suck. Word would not destroy your layout because you move an image on pixel on the left. Access wouldn't produce the most corruptible db ever. The File explorer would not start in 7 seconds randomly in some machines (see last twitter trend), and its search would actually be useful.
The wizard to fix your internet issues would have solved a problem at least once. MS would not allow tons of crapware to be installed by 3rd party. Python in the windows store would not have been made non standard.
We wouldn't have to wait 2020 to have an upgrade to the terminal. The registry would be self documenting. Skype wouldn't have been destroyed after being bought. You would be able to get to your user directory easily out of the box. Cortana would be useful. Surface wouldn't run to crawl because they would be optimized for their hardware.
I can continue like that for hours.
Because those are not subtle issues. There are other teams at Microsoft that would never let that happen.
The priority of MS is to conquer the market. At some points it meant being a bully. Now it's to pretend to be FOSS BFF. It's always been about getting devs on the platforms, and business on the hook.
But at no point in MS history has been ever been, when you at the actual results, making good software.
Good software like .Net, AoE 2 or Excel were made by the few of their accidentally amazing team.
Maken 25 days ago [-]
>Word would not destroy your layout because you move an image on pixel on the left
I swear every time someone tells me that LibreOfficie is simply not up to standard, I think of how much more sane its handling of floating tables and images is. Also,
>AoE 2
A company they killed to make the next monthly report of Xbox look nicer.
johnchristopher 24 days ago [-]
> We would not have the mess of UI with thousands of toolkits, the infamous env var windows staying unusable for decades, the right click "more option" in W11 that changes theme mid-flight.
> We wouldn't have had the awful windows media player that couldn't read anything without a pack of spyware installed in the 90'. Or IE6 being frozen into obsolescence. Or ads in the start menu.
> Teams file sharing and chat would not suck. Word would not destroy your layout because you move an image on pixel on the left. Access wouldn't produce the most corruptible db ever. The File explorer would not start in 7 seconds randomly in some machines (see last twitter trend), and its search would actually be useful.
> The wizard to fix your internet issues would have solved a problem at least once. MS would not allow tons of crapware to be installed by 3rd party. Python in the windows store would not have been made non standard.
> We wouldn't have to wait 2020 to have an upgrade to the terminal. The registry would be self documenting. Skype wouldn't have been destroyed after being bought. You would be able to get to your user directory easily out of the box. Cortana would be useful. Surface wouldn't run to crawl because they would be optimized for their hardware.
♪ we didn't start the fire ♪
BiteCode_dev 16 days ago [-]
Frozen system tray,
What else do I have to say?
attendant3446 25 days ago [-]
> I miss the time when Microsoft wanted to make useful software.
This move seems to be in line with the Microsoft I know. They have always done it - ruin good things. There have been many MS products over the years and they have all turned to shit. As soon as Microsoft did something good, they always come out with a new version that is terrible. It's the most Microsoft thing ever, in my opinion.
ljm 25 days ago [-]
MS is such a behemoth it doesn't really need to try. They know a captive audience of Windows and Office users are just going to use whatever they build because it's there, not because it's better than the competition.
Why pay for an email client when you have Outlook? Why pay for Slack when you have Teams? Why pay for cloud storage when you have OneDrive?
Could make the same argument for any giant corporation really: they don't need to innovate to survive, they don't need to do better to survive, they just have to keep using their muscle and their size to stay ahead.
ThinkBeat 25 days ago [-]
Like Microsoft GitHub?
redbell 25 days ago [-]
> In other words, it injects spam, but the spam is special because you can't delete it.
During this week, I had a client approached me to build him a Spam Reporter Outlook add-in. He wanted the add-in to be cross-platform (Windows, macOS and Web). I started working on the project by creating a new project in Visual Studio 2022 and choosing Outlook Web Add-in as a template. Once the new project was created and ready, I pressed F5 to run the boilerplate, "Outlook.com" was launched in the browser (Edge) and it took forever to load! The loading spinner keeps turning.. then I realized, there was an error in the code and the execution was held until I choose 'Step Forward'. I was really puzzled why a fresh project could crash in the first attempt, then I quickly noticed the error was not in the project's code but in another .js file that was loading in Outook.com tab, checked the js URL just to find the domain it belongs to is unusual (at least for me),it reads something like "https://www.taboola.com/loader.js". To add insult to injury, this file was reloaded every time I clicked on a different email, it drove me crazy when I realized this "loader.js" was actually an ad injector, there was plenty of spammy ads on the right side of each email opened. Somehow, I was able to block this whole garbage by simply accessing the "Network" tab, find this .js devil then blocked it. Only then, I could continue to work on this project peacefully!
lostmsu 25 days ago [-]
Sounds like you might have viruses TBH
alternatex 25 days ago [-]
It runs in the browser to allow for more options regarding interoperability. When Outlook is a web app and Teams is a web app you can throw components from one into the other anywhere on the screen. It also saves a lot of money building apps this way. This is the case for all apps built by Microsoft and the trend is not going to change.
In Microsoft, all product managers care about is shipping more features, because that's the only way they can move their career in the company forward. Do yourself a favor and just don't use Outlook for personal stuff. Microsoft has never aimed to make a good impression on the consumer market. They only care for enterprise and that's how they build all of their software.
mysterydip 25 days ago [-]
> you can throw components from one into the other anywhere on the screen.
The difference is this is proprietary and you have to maintain it plus train every new employee on it till the end of time. I'm sure you've noticed Microsoft's direction is to use more and more public tools in their software and avoid less popular and proprietary tools (even their own). It's done to reduce costs of both development and training.
They have no regard for the outcome of this approach when it comes to software UX because most of their customers don't get to choose the software they use (enterprise). The apps just need to be good enough to sell to company management.
It's a very good business model and only surprising if you consider MS to be a software company more than they are a money making company.
42lux 25 days ago [-]
Ah... as always foundation work for something that will never happen.
dmonitor 25 days ago [-]
It running in a browser is especially ridiculous. Has Microsoft just given up on developing native Windows applications now?
dspillett 25 days ago [-]
Yes.
They are definitely heading that way, I've been saying I expect them to for some time, and they are slowly proving my guess right.
It used to be that their cash cows were Windows (Desktop & Server), Office, SQL Server, and to a lesser extent Exchange (even earlier in time it was just DOS, Windows (desktop), and Office). Everything else, including Visual Studio despite charging a pile for it, was to funnel and capture people into using those, or to inconvenience startups in other areas that might later try to compete in one of those arenas.
Now their cash cows are Azure, Office subscriptions, and to a lesser extent SQL Server, Exchange, and advertising. They don't care what OS you use and what apps & services you run, but they want you to run it on Azure (unless you are a huge concern in which case the money from on-prem SQL and other licences are still worth talking about) and pay them subscriptions for storage & processing.
They can't just abandon Windows, that would look bad, but they don't want their own stuff to be keeping it alive any longer than needs be. If everyone shuffled over to Linux, Android, MacOS/iOS, etc. but still used online office and apps running in Azure, that would be ideal for them – the hassle of maintaining desktop Windows with all the hardware compatibility issues and such isn't something they would get into today if they were not already there.
Giving up on controlling their own browser engine was a big sign they were moving this way: let someone else deal with all that client UI gubbings, there is no practical MS-scale money in it, and concentrate on selling the subscription services to office users and devs. I think the failure of their attempt at mobile market-share was when this ball really got rolling internally: the thought at high levels in the business being “hang on, if we can walk away from that because it isn't worth the effort to keep pushing, could that be true of other end-user OS stuff too?”
It'll take time to move everything either properly cross-platform or at least browser-based, SQL Server was a big step in that direction, but that is relatively easy as it is effectively a micro-OS sitting atop something else, the likes of Visual Studio will be harder, but it will happen, and then Desktop Windows will be allowed to slowly die. Server Windows already is in cloud: devs are being pulled away from caring about the base OS to running everything in OS-agnostic functions and light container-based services instead.
This is why they don't care that people like me won't ever be buying into Windows 11 at all, even where we did hold our noses and let Windows 10 happen.
seertaak 25 days ago [-]
For me, copying to the cloud is a deal-breaker (I switched to proton mail for a reason!). Fortunately, there's Thunderbird. I don't trust Microsoft not to do dodgy Google-like things with my data at this point.
KronisLV 25 days ago [-]
> The worst thing about this, to me, is that Windows Mail client, the one they're discontinuing, is a fantastic piece of software. It's simple, lean, capable, and elegantly designed. It's perfect for a novice computer user to check their email on.
Even if I personally use Thunderbird, I'm very much inclined to agree! It's a very usable!
That said, I'm kind of partial to the idea of just running something like Roundcube and figuring out a way to have a desktop wrapper around it, e.g. the same way how an app like Mattermost/Slack/Discord can work either in the web or locally. While the resource usage would be like the typical Electron app's, at the same time I like having a consistent UI experience wherever I am more and more, especially with self-hosted software when possible.
Edit: actually wasn't too hard to do this with Electron, however might need to find a webmail that has good support for multiple mailboxes. RainLoop seems to support multiple accounts, but has a dropdown for switching users, not sure how I feel about using the Nextcloud Mail app which has the UI I'd like (a list of accounts to the side, alongside the folders for each), but would couple things to Nextcloud.
tcfhgj 25 days ago [-]
checkout WinoMail, more or less a open source clone of Windows Mail:
I wish I knew about this when I set up my grandmother's new computer earlier this year. She has gotten used to using windows mail and I had to explain to her how to tell the difference between her own emails and ads that look exactly like her own emails.
lostmsu 25 days ago [-]
I would say it is too buggy at this point for regular users
skrebbel 25 days ago [-]
wow that looks amazing, thanks!
mikrotikker 24 days ago [-]
Par for the course with MS isn't it?
ggm 25 days ago [-]
The lack of tech documentation and the fact they obfuscate or even don't provide "don't do that" options goes very strongly into older Microsoft dark patterns "for your convenience"
They did this with backup. Want to backup to local media? Why would you do that when we will back it up in one drive which you must pay for.
pjmlp 25 days ago [-]
Unfortunely many business units from the organization seem to never have changed that much from the old ways.
omega3 25 days ago [-]
Every email program attempts to expand its features until it can no longer efficiently send email. Those programs which resist this expansion are eventually replaced by ones which cannot.
thrdbndndn 25 days ago [-]
Outlook (new) (Windows desktop client) is one of the worst product from MS I've used in recent years. The lack of polishing is staggering.
Let's be fair first, it works most of time (I know it's a low bar). And I actually prefer its aesthetics than the Outlook (classic) and Mail app.
Now, back to its bugs/issues:
1. Open an email in a search folder will not mark it as read. This is the biggest gripe I have. Since Outlook (new) does not provide any native way to add a label of "unread" on the sidebar, I created a search folder with "select a type = Unread mail" and added it to my favorite. However, it's almost unusable due to the bug mentioned above.
2. You CANNOT search non-ASCII (i.e. Chinese, Japanese, etc.) category (tag). You can add them, (and if you use a, say, Chinese client, the default color categories are literally in Chinese!) but searching these categories (or just click from a tagged email) returns nothing. This fucked me so badly when I categorized 1000+ emails before realizing.
3. The state of the client at various places are often not in sync. For example you may have cleared your unread email already but the icon on taskbar still shows unread dot. Or you opened multiple windows and some say you have 0, some say you have 5. Or within the same window, the inbox sidebar label says 0 but a search folder label for certain condition (say, from certain email address) says otherwise when it's impossible. And there is no refresh button -- so if that happens you have to re-open manually or click a random label and then go back and wish it fixes itself.
I'm sure there are lots of others, but these are more than bad enough.
I'm genuinely concerned how they can ship a software at this stage, particularly issue 1 and 2 are very easily reproducible and I've reported them multiple times through feedback with only canned reply, and they're still not fixed after months.
n_plus_1_acc 25 days ago [-]
It's the same with New teams. One of the most upvoted issues in their uservoice/techcomminity/feedback hub/whatever is the ability to set multiple spell check languages. It's only ever the language you have your Teams UI in. Even worse, the date format uses by planner, calendar etc is from that language too. Even if Windows has detailed locale settings, and the MS365 setting also let you set a date format, Teams just ignores it. By the way, did I mention languages other than english are machine-translated and hilariously wrong.
wasteduniverse 25 days ago [-]
[dead]
canistel 25 days ago [-]
Meanwhile, Thunderbird is rolling out MS Exchange capability by v130 (which I am hoping must be very soon)
hetman 25 days ago [-]
Thunderbird seems to run everything in a single thread, something I only noticed when I tried to sync some large mailing list folders and the UI basically became unusable. I was really hoping to switch to it before this cropped up.
Outlook has been falling apart at the seams for a while now. But I cannot find a email client that supports multiple exchange servers and parses calendar invites in a way that's compatible with Teams. I'm the first to jeet Outlook if Thunderbird will do this but I'm also open to suggestions here.
rightbyte 25 days ago [-]
It is a losing proposition to try to deal with compatibility between different MS products. Especially moving SaaS targets you can't control.
whitehexagon 25 days ago [-]
I just this week lost access to my hotmail/outlook account from Thunderbird, although I'm on a much older version. Sounds like MS dropped POP3 support, probably for my own 'safety and security'. How long has that been an industry standard though, shame. Anyway a good trigger to drop another ad focused company, at least that is what it seems when I was forced to use the web interface today.
beretguy 25 days ago [-]
> probably for my own 'safety and security'
Yes, your safety and security from Microsoft.
EraYaN 25 days ago [-]
Thunderbird will support EWS, which if you use a cloud based Exchange account will be unavailable in 2026.
Neil44 25 days ago [-]
They've recently renamed Outlook to Outlook (classic). So you can see which way the wind is blowing on this. Outlook (new) is still missing tons of big features and the UI sucks.
pjmlp 25 days ago [-]
Similar to how WinDev keeps pushing WinUI as the successor, while it is still quite lacking versus UWP, which was already quite lacking versus WPF.
It is no accident that WPF has been reborn at BUILD 2024, as the 2nd official way to do Windows apps.
And in the end it hardly matters, as the business apps unit is now full of people that only understand Web, probably started using Windows when they joined Microsoft, and keep shipping stuff stuck into Web widgets.
dax_ 25 days ago [-]
I will keep using "classic" for as long as possible. This trend to turn everything into painfully slow web apps is really getting on my nerves. As an example, I use quick steps very frequently to categorize emails. In classic Outlook, I click the button and the email is moved immediately - in the new Outlook it has a ~1 second delay until the email is moved and I can move the next one. Takes so long to get through my inbox.
emeril 25 days ago [-]
I've been using outlook 2010 for 15 years (+ and old license of "lookeen")
it seems to be the least bad version I've encountered for an exchange client that seems compatible with modern exchange
if I had super modern exchange and had to use the latest desktop client, I'd probably just use the webclient at this point as it's probably better
ultimately, I'd take gmail over any incarnation of MS mail apps these days (including outlook 2010)
Tempest1981 25 days ago [-]
In classic Outlook, I really hate the animated lagging cursor when composing. Seems like it can't be disabled any more? (Same with Excel)
Maybe this is to prepare us for slower new Outlook?
Didn't know it moved from Office settings to Windows settings! Although now my Start menu animation is lost... I hate these tradeoffs.
Const-me 25 days ago [-]
I discovered that setting after building a new desktop PC recently. It was disappointing to find the awful keyboard lag introduced by the new OS, as I use MS Office daily.
About start menu animations, I actually prefer the UX without them. I press the Win key and the menu appears, no need to wait.
tcfhgj 25 days ago [-]
MS: just buy a faster CPU, not my problem
trigganiggaz 25 days ago [-]
[dead]
seb1204 25 days ago [-]
Not only does the UI suck, most keyboard shortcuts also no longer work or are just way to slow for my workflow.
thanksgiving 25 days ago [-]
Same with msteams. I have mistakenly called so many groups by accidentally pressing Ctrl shift C instead of Ctrl shift v (unformatted paste). When I ask Microsoft people, they say they use power toys to disable this shortcut so they know this is a problem...
Neil44 25 days ago [-]
That's a hate of mine too I use the keyboard quite a bit in Outlook. No shortcuts in (new).
yread 25 days ago [-]
Yep, it's my fault guys, sorry: I just migrated my grandma from Outlook 2007 to the new Outlook last week, so of course they have to deprecate it. Keeping the oldies sharp by having them learn new UI patterns every now and then
jillesvangurp 25 days ago [-]
MS Teams is a UX disaster zone. So if that is any indication, the new Outlook might not be that great. MS is oddly inept building good UIs lately. Things like Outlook and Office are still a big part of their revenue; so it's kind of odd just how terrible their products are.
I haven't used Office in over a decade. Just not a thing in startups. But teams seems to be a necessary evil to be able to talk with our customers who insist on using it. So I get exposed to that quite a bit. Horrible bit of software.
larodi 25 days ago [-]
Outlook new is missing one fundamental feature which is automation. This blob of html can not be programmed unlike predecessors for more 15 years.
It is so easy to instantiate and use old outlook that I really fail to understand what is their endgame with this killing of a top and well respected product.
alt227 25 days ago [-]
I think the article has it correct, its their way of forcing all users to have their emails stored and scraped by Microsoft, no matter the provider.
486sx33 25 days ago [-]
Need more free training data!
The most annoying part is the times outlook automatically updated to new outlook, of which I was not notified and could not decline. I guess it vacuumed up all my email data those times, even though I “reverted” to legacy outlook
skipnup 25 days ago [-]
I switched to doing most of the automation in power automate
This of course only works with exchange afaik, but why else would I use outlook.
hetman 25 days ago [-]
Not to mention the rather consistent crashing. I see it across multiple systems which makes me wonder if the developers even use it themselves.
wkat4242 25 days ago [-]
Yeah they did the same with the Mac version. It's still a real app, not electron. But it lacked features and still does. For example when you set your out of office you no longer have the ability to auto-decline all your meetings during this period.
And the "Block sender" button was missing for about a year until it was reintroduced (and now it is still missing from the mobile outlook app!). I always block sender instead of move to spam. Which MS wants to avoid people using because many spammers are their Office 365 customers too :(
EnigmaFlare 25 days ago [-]
Years ago, they made Outlook the web email service and I thought they were going to deprecate Outlook the application and keep the name for the web email. But man this is confusing. Too many things are called Outlook.
7952 25 days ago [-]
Its maddening how software doesn't benefit anymore from fast local storage. We have massive inexpensive SSD's sitting empty whilst you wait for a tiny PDF to download.
gpvos 25 days ago [-]
And when we finally have huge data pipes to our homes and offices.
kleiba 25 days ago [-]
The problem is not that email gets moved to "the cloud" - naturally, email has always lived on somebody's servers. The problem is non-tech people get tricked into doing something they would likely not want if they understood the implications - like, allowing MS to copy all of your existing email from a different account (say, gmail), when all you want is to manage multiple accounts from a single piece of software.
This whole "cloud" lingo serves to hide technological realities and privacy implications with the only goal to improve business.
Gud 25 days ago [-]
And then probing the e-mails, learning everything there is to know about you.
ddmf 25 days ago [-]
The amount of issues this has caused as a sysadmin - no, don't open new outlook, open the new old outlook.
ah bugger it, add to intune - required uninstall.
ra120271 25 days ago [-]
It's one bad thing to sync all one's email to the their cloud. It's another bad thing to give the cloud the credentials to sync one's email directly. So in theory even if you stop using the client they can still get your email without your knowledge and explicit permission (ie you are not using the client and would reasonably expect they don't have access to new emails).
Also the cloud service now have the capability to save then retrieve the credentials in plain text making them a rich target for being compromised.
25 days ago [-]
klreaj 25 days ago [-]
The MSFT P/E ratio went up from around 10 in 2010 to 37 now. Presumably due to hype strategies like Azure and AI.
Why do businesses tolerate the spying and data collection? Is there no industrial espionage? A German university advised researchers not to use Skype due to the possibility of research theft.
It's a pretty dangerous game that MSFT is playing here. What goes up can come down.
Roark66 25 days ago [-]
No idea... A current client (a Fortune 500 company worth billions and all of that money is in software developed over 50+ years) is currently migrating to Github... Also Copilot was rolled out to everyone a couple of months ago. So it seems there is zero concern for giving all data to MS and paying through the nose for the privilege... Insanity.
29athrowaway 25 days ago [-]
They move it to the cloud where it becomes AI food.
sirolimus 25 days ago [-]
This is over a year old news.
nunobrito 25 days ago [-]
Same "brading" as we see on Discord "servers" which basically all run on the company side.
Now there is really no way of verifying what kind of access they do with your personal email data.
sub7 25 days ago [-]
I have a hotmail account from the 90s and they've made it impossible to use not-Outlook clients to authenticate with IMAP servers - calling it a "bug" that's being "worked on" (for over a year now apparently)
Basically trying to push you to paid Exchange/Office365 subscriptions.
The more aggro these big tech cos are trying to move you from buying great products to paying for overpriced subscriptions, the closer we get to them trading at their historical PEs (down ~50% from today)
ashildr 25 days ago [-]
So even if your company has its own mailserver everyone is locked out of email if some Microsoft services are down, again. Brilliant.
blackeyeblitzar 25 days ago [-]
Break them up. We need revised antitrust laws.
bbarnett 25 days ago [-]
I think yes, and it really boils down to role separation. For everything.
An example being cable companies. They should have no capability to own TV stations, media creators, news companies, the list goes on. Backbone is backbone, be it an internet connection, or a TV/video feed.
Back to Microsoft you can make an OS, or you can make apps, but not both. An OS being a 'backbone'.
Applies to Google. "Search" vs "Ads". Backbone versus 'stuff on top'.
Really, sadly, there are cases where co-mingled stuff makes perfect sense. But bad actors are why we can't have nice things.
I wonder, there have always been jokes about how the world would be a paradise without lawyers, but would that be more MBAs in the 21st? Whether cars, or computers, or even the ladder I recently bought that is junk, it really all comes down to MBAs.
Engineers input "that's not acceptable quality", and MBAs just tromp all over that.
MBAs, the "we can't have nice things" people.
oarsinsync 25 days ago [-]
How would you suggest splitting up a heavily vertically integrated company, like eg Apple?
Does Google search become a paid subscription product in your vision of separation of search vs ads?
bbarnett 25 days ago [-]
Companies have been split up before, and such acts are nuanced and often company specific. One logical thought is that existing companies would be handled differently than newer companies venturing where they should not.
I have no detail on what precisely need be done, typically that's where experts chime in. And no, that does not invalidate my opinion.
If for example, I get food poisoning regularly from the food I buy at a supermarket, then something must be done. The problem must be fixed. The food must be rendered safe. Which means "food producers must provide safe food" is a sensible response, and then food experts enact.
So back to Apple and Google? They're broken, as all synergistic orgs are. And yes this needs to be dealt with.
But you're missing something more important. I did not specify only them, but just general division for all corporate entities. This is much larger than Google or Apple or cable companies.
Playing devils advocate, the real problem is that such solutions enacted solely on the US stage only won't work. Instead it will simply shift power to externals. You'd need to get most countries on the planet to comply, else a competitive edge would be lost in the US.
smolder 25 days ago [-]
Apple TV can be separate, as can their music stuff. Other than that I'm not sure.
25 days ago [-]
dgellow 25 days ago [-]
Yes please, the whole world would be a better place if US antitrust laws would be updated for realities of the modern world
Saying this as a European who has no say in the US system but definitely feels it’s international influence
tcfhgj 25 days ago [-]
WinoMail is a good replacement for the Mail app, in case anyone is using it and is being shoved to using the Outlook App
Alifatisk 25 days ago [-]
My worst fear is if Microsoft decides to fiddle with Hotmail/outlook and make it into something I have to pay for. I've had my email address for 15+ years, it's going to be a impossible task to change email address everywhere.
appendix-rock 25 days ago [-]
I mean…do you plan on outlasting Hotmail? 15 years isn’t that long. Your choices are probably to do it proactively or to do it when your back is against the wall. There is no third option. I’m not going to be like one of those insane nerds advocating for running your own mail server, but if you care about email address longevity, mail at one’s own domain seems the only way to actually achieve that. These days, it’s zero effort to use Fastmail or Hey or something to get email at your own domain. They register it for you and everything! The hard bit is, as you say, moving everything. But, again, that’s inevitable.
kuon 25 days ago [-]
Yeah, that's why I always tell people to buy a domain for email, so they can move it where they want at any time. Hopefully, it becomes more and more standard with email providers. But when you have a long history, the best you can do is setup a redirection and change email address at the few places where it is really important (bank, google/microsoft/apple account, ...).
type0 25 days ago [-]
I know this is anecdata but many Outlook users I spoke with few years ago was wanting this feature to happen. And given how rampant cryptolockers were in those organisations, they're probably joyful about it not being stored locally.
ratg13 25 days ago [-]
If you connect with a provider like Gmail in the article .. your email is still on google’s servers.. modified messages don’t get synchronized back.
You can choose to leave your mail on the server with all mail providers.
The only difference is that now Microsoft keeps a second copy of all your mails so they can do more AI on your data
blacklight 25 days ago [-]
If you still use Outlook for ANYTHING then it's self-inflicted and well deserved.
beretguy 25 days ago [-]
Or employer inflicted and you install libreoffice.
albertopv 25 days ago [-]
New Outlook is 100% shit. So many features missing. Even adding attachments is sick. Of course, given it's an embedded web app.
wkat4242 25 days ago [-]
Yeah if you have O365 it always tries to goad you into uploading stuff into onedrive and sharing a link instead of just attaching stuff. Very annoying because the process for externals to sign into sharepoint (which onedrive is just a wrapper for) is terrible.
chakintosh 25 days ago [-]
Can't train your AI if your customers' emails are stored locally.
gloosx 24 days ago [-]
Ah, classic micro$oft ramming their thing down the users throats while they are shouting into the void.
Steady market share decline trend for the past 10+ years. Lovely stuff ;)
pestatije 25 days ago [-]
one step closer to finally merge hotmail and outlook together
wolpoli 25 days ago [-]
As far as I can tell, they have already merged. Both the free version of Mail and enterprise version of Outlook (New) run the same user interface.
lostlogin 25 days ago [-]
Hotlook? Outmail?
beretguy 25 days ago [-]
Lookoutforhotmale?
pestatije 25 days ago [-]
ok now i know why my job applications never get any answer
s_m_r 25 days ago [-]
For those looking for a simple, lightweight, and nice-looking mail client, check out Mailspring, It has a free version that satisfies most of your needs.
BodyCulture 25 days ago [-]
The website is forcing me to disable ad blocking, but I am just using Orion browser and am happy with it, so can not see the content.
benterix 25 days ago [-]
Have you tried disabling JS? It works for me on most sites, including this one.
trustno2 25 days ago [-]
Well, it has more Copilot AI stuff baked in, that's what people want nowadays.
kleiba 25 days ago [-]
Folks, don't complain. You wanted the cloud, you're getting the cloud.
aNoob7000 25 days ago [-]
People didn't want the cloud. Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and others wanted everyone in the cloud to get them on the subscription bandwagon.
I hope more and more people vote with their wallets and go to other platforms and tools.
kleiba 25 days ago [-]
I don't think you're right. People love the benefits they get from the cloud, mostly being able to access data from multiple devices and huge storage capabilities. The downsides are, unfortunately, often overlooked.
For non-techies, it is not immediate obvious what the downsides even are, or why they should matter.
wkat4242 25 days ago [-]
I never wanted any cloud. I never used a MS account to sign into windows either, which is becoming ever more of a fight.
kleiba 25 days ago [-]
Neither did/do I. When I write "you", of course I don't mean you personally. Keep fighting the good fight! What I'm trying to point at is that convenience trumps privacy concerns almost every time for most people. The reasons for that are plentifold.
dghughes 25 days ago [-]
Didn't Cisco try to revert by putting some cloud back locally and we ended up with Fog computing?
beretguy 25 days ago [-]
This is my first time hearing we wanted the cloud.
daft_pink 25 days ago [-]
are we just waiting for excel to exhibit this behavior shortly?
MaxikCZ 25 days ago [-]
I needed to send categorized and annotated batch of pictures (150MB) to a client, and for some reason I decided to drop the pics into excel sheet (allowing me to nicely support them with data etc). The client complained that they use web version of office 360, and that version doesnt allow to open excel files bigger than 100MB. I cant even.
beretguy 25 days ago [-]
… finish a sentence.
MaxikCZ 25 days ago [-]
Thats like asking someone to not write "lol" when they can write "laughed out loud". Get on with the times, old man.
beretguy 24 days ago [-]
Do you enjoy insulting people? It was meant up be a joke.
MaxikCZ 24 days ago [-]
Do you enjoy victimizing yourself?
It wasnt meant to be an insult.
dax_ 25 days ago [-]
We're already going there, the new Python integration for Excel is cloud-only - the Python is not executed locally. It wouldn't surprise me if more and more features in Excel going forward will be the same way.
grandpoobah 25 days ago [-]
I've been using LibreOffice Calc instead of Excel for maybe 10 years, and I'm still yet to come across a feature that Excel has which Calc doesn't. The UI leaves a lot to be desired though. Anyway point is, I don't think Excel will be missed when Microsoft inevitably enshitifies it.
pndy 25 days ago [-]
Article mentions it's "a wrapper around Microsoft's cloud services" but I wonder if is it actually a native application or some electron/chromium embedded framework app?
n_plus_1_acc 25 days ago [-]
New outlook uses the Edge Webview thing, very similar to electron
senectus1 25 days ago [-]
its so, so very bad.
but... if you want co-pilot... you have to have it.
All my exec's and their PA's want it. but.. they also want Offline access to their mail.
For some reason its MY FAULT they cant have both.
so very very shit.
wkat4242 25 days ago [-]
This is not entirely true, there are some copilot for O365 features in the old outlook. Like the "summarise these emails with copilot" and the "draft with copilot".
The chatbot interface where you can ask basic questions is still missing in the old Outlook though. But you can use the web interface at https://copilot.microsoft.com to access your emails too.
Other than that I agree, the new outlook is terrible, and it's ridiculous that it doesn't support offline email. It's really nothing more but a wrapper for the web interface.
I'm not a huge fan of copilot either. It's not nearly as capable as they try to make it look. Unfortunately all the top dogs in our company are riding the AI hype train so they must all have it.
tgv 25 days ago [-]
So now Outlook users' emails have two points to leak from? And we all know how good MS' security is.
> ... Co-pilot ...
Make that three. And beware:
> The offloading ... removes the ability for security engineers or researchers to easily inspect what the client is doing
Yaggo 25 days ago [-]
Can it yet do proper quoting?
bachmeier 25 days ago [-]
Yet another example of why I won't take a consulting job without written permission to upload data to Microsoft's cloud. The client will expect you to use Windows but they want you to promise that you won't share their data with anyone. There's no way to promise "local only" anything if you're using Windows.
wkat4242 25 days ago [-]
Welcome to the Extinguish phase...
oldpersonintx 25 days ago [-]
[dead]
25 days ago [-]
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rochak 25 days ago [-]
[flagged]
BodyCulture 25 days ago [-]
So like IMAP?
alt227 25 days ago [-]
Like IMAP, except Microsoft downloads and stores all your folders on their servers, even if your email provider is not Microsoft.
BodyCulture 25 days ago [-]
Okay, so this happens not only for MS mail accounts, thanks for this! I probably could not even imagine that they are basically copying private data to their servers!
I don’t understand why people are still using their products, I am using Linux since many years and see no problem at all with that. Plus Apple for phone, but not sure about their privacy promises…
wkat4242 25 days ago [-]
Yeah so it's nothing like IMAP really.
alt227 15 days ago [-]
Id say its like IMAP with a middleman who reads all your emails for you first!
tamrix 25 days ago [-]
I don't mind the new outlook. The meeting notifications are far less intrusive. You can update a meeting without spamming new emails. The simplified views do 95%of what I use it for. The calendar view is easier to read.
Everyone will hate this but whatever, internal company email is dead. It causes more issues than solutions. Phishing, spam, malware, etc. It's legacy tech.
The new outlook client is linking it with more modern medium specific communication such as loop, teams, sharepoint online, one drive etc.
wkat4242 25 days ago [-]
> Everyone will hate this but whatever, internal company email is dead. It causes more issues than solutions. Phishing, spam, malware, etc. It's legacy tech.
Yeah I know, our Microsoft consultants are constantly spamming this "Use Teams not mail" BS. And the "Why are you not using edge yet?" stuff. I really hate the Microsoft approach where every technical person must also push all the marketing drivel.
However Teams has a major problem: Discoverability. In Outlook when you communicate a lot you can move your emails to custom folders to find them back easily. In Teams you can't. Every ad-hoc chat opens up some Sharepoint site somewhere and after using Teams for a couple years it means you have thousands of locations where your information could be. It's a huge mess and there is no way to manually categorise this to find back important stuff like you could with email.
The new cloud thing is worse in every way. It confusingly copies your email over from your email provider's servers onto Microsoft's servers, and then shows an ad that looks exactly like an email in the middle of all the emails. In other words, it injects spam, but the spam is special because you can't delete it. Also, it needs to run in a browser for no apparent reason. For anybody currently using Windows Mail, it's a pure downgrade.
I understand that a company running a cloud service needs to finance this service, eg with ads, but this doesn't need to be a cloud service at all. It's so extremely backward that I simply can't comprehend how it made it through all the management layers at Microsoft. If all builtin software that comes with Windows turns into a bad, ad-ridden cloud apps then that's just one more reason for people to switch to Chromebooks, right? What's next, ads in Solitaire?¹
I miss the time when Microsoft wanted to make useful software.
¹) At the risk of ruining the joke by explaining it: Microsoft already did this. They removed Solitaire from Windows and replaced it with a terrible Windows Store app which indeed is loaded to the rim with screamy animated banner ads. I assume that the PM responsible for that got promoted to the email team or something.
Plenty of people still in there that do.
But it's never been a general policicy of Microsoft that turned into actual culture and actions.
Because that would require a general vision in that direction, which would imply we would never have one version out of two of Windows (Me, Vista, 8, 11...) that looks like a prototype.
We would not have the mess of UI with thousands of toolkits, the infamous env var windows staying unusable for decades, the right click "more option" in W11 that changes theme mid-flight.
We wouldn't have had the awful windows media player that couldn't read anything without a pack of spyware installed in the 90'. Or IE6 being frozen into obsolescence. Or ads in the start menu.
Teams file sharing and chat would not suck. Word would not destroy your layout because you move an image on pixel on the left. Access wouldn't produce the most corruptible db ever. The File explorer would not start in 7 seconds randomly in some machines (see last twitter trend), and its search would actually be useful.
The wizard to fix your internet issues would have solved a problem at least once. MS would not allow tons of crapware to be installed by 3rd party. Python in the windows store would not have been made non standard.
We wouldn't have to wait 2020 to have an upgrade to the terminal. The registry would be self documenting. Skype wouldn't have been destroyed after being bought. You would be able to get to your user directory easily out of the box. Cortana would be useful. Surface wouldn't run to crawl because they would be optimized for their hardware.
I can continue like that for hours.
Because those are not subtle issues. There are other teams at Microsoft that would never let that happen.
The priority of MS is to conquer the market. At some points it meant being a bully. Now it's to pretend to be FOSS BFF. It's always been about getting devs on the platforms, and business on the hook.
But at no point in MS history has been ever been, when you at the actual results, making good software.
Good software like .Net, AoE 2 or Excel were made by the few of their accidentally amazing team.
I swear every time someone tells me that LibreOfficie is simply not up to standard, I think of how much more sane its handling of floating tables and images is. Also,
>AoE 2
A company they killed to make the next monthly report of Xbox look nicer.
> We wouldn't have had the awful windows media player that couldn't read anything without a pack of spyware installed in the 90'. Or IE6 being frozen into obsolescence. Or ads in the start menu.
> Teams file sharing and chat would not suck. Word would not destroy your layout because you move an image on pixel on the left. Access wouldn't produce the most corruptible db ever. The File explorer would not start in 7 seconds randomly in some machines (see last twitter trend), and its search would actually be useful.
> The wizard to fix your internet issues would have solved a problem at least once. MS would not allow tons of crapware to be installed by 3rd party. Python in the windows store would not have been made non standard.
> We wouldn't have to wait 2020 to have an upgrade to the terminal. The registry would be self documenting. Skype wouldn't have been destroyed after being bought. You would be able to get to your user directory easily out of the box. Cortana would be useful. Surface wouldn't run to crawl because they would be optimized for their hardware.
♪ we didn't start the fire ♪
This move seems to be in line with the Microsoft I know. They have always done it - ruin good things. There have been many MS products over the years and they have all turned to shit. As soon as Microsoft did something good, they always come out with a new version that is terrible. It's the most Microsoft thing ever, in my opinion.
Why pay for an email client when you have Outlook? Why pay for Slack when you have Teams? Why pay for cloud storage when you have OneDrive?
Could make the same argument for any giant corporation really: they don't need to innovate to survive, they don't need to do better to survive, they just have to keep using their muscle and their size to stay ahead.
During this week, I had a client approached me to build him a Spam Reporter Outlook add-in. He wanted the add-in to be cross-platform (Windows, macOS and Web). I started working on the project by creating a new project in Visual Studio 2022 and choosing Outlook Web Add-in as a template. Once the new project was created and ready, I pressed F5 to run the boilerplate, "Outlook.com" was launched in the browser (Edge) and it took forever to load! The loading spinner keeps turning.. then I realized, there was an error in the code and the execution was held until I choose 'Step Forward'. I was really puzzled why a fresh project could crash in the first attempt, then I quickly noticed the error was not in the project's code but in another .js file that was loading in Outook.com tab, checked the js URL just to find the domain it belongs to is unusual (at least for me),it reads something like "https://www.taboola.com/loader.js". To add insult to injury, this file was reloaded every time I clicked on a different email, it drove me crazy when I realized this "loader.js" was actually an ad injector, there was plenty of spammy ads on the right side of each email opened. Somehow, I was able to block this whole garbage by simply accessing the "Network" tab, find this .js devil then blocked it. Only then, I could continue to work on this project peacefully!
In Microsoft, all product managers care about is shipping more features, because that's the only way they can move their career in the company forward. Do yourself a favor and just don't use Outlook for personal stuff. Microsoft has never aimed to make a good impression on the consumer market. They only care for enterprise and that's how they build all of their software.
Wasn't this office OLE from the 90s? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object_Linking_and_Embedding
They have no regard for the outcome of this approach when it comes to software UX because most of their customers don't get to choose the software they use (enterprise). The apps just need to be good enough to sell to company management.
It's a very good business model and only surprising if you consider MS to be a software company more than they are a money making company.
They are definitely heading that way, I've been saying I expect them to for some time, and they are slowly proving my guess right.
It used to be that their cash cows were Windows (Desktop & Server), Office, SQL Server, and to a lesser extent Exchange (even earlier in time it was just DOS, Windows (desktop), and Office). Everything else, including Visual Studio despite charging a pile for it, was to funnel and capture people into using those, or to inconvenience startups in other areas that might later try to compete in one of those arenas.
Now their cash cows are Azure, Office subscriptions, and to a lesser extent SQL Server, Exchange, and advertising. They don't care what OS you use and what apps & services you run, but they want you to run it on Azure (unless you are a huge concern in which case the money from on-prem SQL and other licences are still worth talking about) and pay them subscriptions for storage & processing.
They can't just abandon Windows, that would look bad, but they don't want their own stuff to be keeping it alive any longer than needs be. If everyone shuffled over to Linux, Android, MacOS/iOS, etc. but still used online office and apps running in Azure, that would be ideal for them – the hassle of maintaining desktop Windows with all the hardware compatibility issues and such isn't something they would get into today if they were not already there.
Giving up on controlling their own browser engine was a big sign they were moving this way: let someone else deal with all that client UI gubbings, there is no practical MS-scale money in it, and concentrate on selling the subscription services to office users and devs. I think the failure of their attempt at mobile market-share was when this ball really got rolling internally: the thought at high levels in the business being “hang on, if we can walk away from that because it isn't worth the effort to keep pushing, could that be true of other end-user OS stuff too?”
It'll take time to move everything either properly cross-platform or at least browser-based, SQL Server was a big step in that direction, but that is relatively easy as it is effectively a micro-OS sitting atop something else, the likes of Visual Studio will be harder, but it will happen, and then Desktop Windows will be allowed to slowly die. Server Windows already is in cloud: devs are being pulled away from caring about the base OS to running everything in OS-agnostic functions and light container-based services instead.
This is why they don't care that people like me won't ever be buying into Windows 11 at all, even where we did hold our noses and let Windows 10 happen.
Even if I personally use Thunderbird, I'm very much inclined to agree! It's a very usable!
That said, I'm kind of partial to the idea of just running something like Roundcube and figuring out a way to have a desktop wrapper around it, e.g. the same way how an app like Mattermost/Slack/Discord can work either in the web or locally. While the resource usage would be like the typical Electron app's, at the same time I like having a consistent UI experience wherever I am more and more, especially with self-hosted software when possible.
Edit: actually wasn't too hard to do this with Electron, however might need to find a webmail that has good support for multiple mailboxes. RainLoop seems to support multiple accounts, but has a dropdown for switching users, not sure how I feel about using the Nextcloud Mail app which has the UI I'd like (a list of accounts to the side, alongside the folders for each), but would couple things to Nextcloud.
https://github.com/bkaankose/Wino-Mail
They did this with backup. Want to backup to local media? Why would you do that when we will back it up in one drive which you must pay for.
Let's be fair first, it works most of time (I know it's a low bar). And I actually prefer its aesthetics than the Outlook (classic) and Mail app.
Now, back to its bugs/issues:
1. Open an email in a search folder will not mark it as read. This is the biggest gripe I have. Since Outlook (new) does not provide any native way to add a label of "unread" on the sidebar, I created a search folder with "select a type = Unread mail" and added it to my favorite. However, it's almost unusable due to the bug mentioned above.
2. You CANNOT search non-ASCII (i.e. Chinese, Japanese, etc.) category (tag). You can add them, (and if you use a, say, Chinese client, the default color categories are literally in Chinese!) but searching these categories (or just click from a tagged email) returns nothing. This fucked me so badly when I categorized 1000+ emails before realizing.
3. The state of the client at various places are often not in sync. For example you may have cleared your unread email already but the icon on taskbar still shows unread dot. Or you opened multiple windows and some say you have 0, some say you have 5. Or within the same window, the inbox sidebar label says 0 but a search folder label for certain condition (say, from certain email address) says otherwise when it's impossible. And there is no refresh button -- so if that happens you have to re-open manually or click a random label and then go back and wish it fixes itself.
I'm sure there are lots of others, but these are more than bad enough.
I'm genuinely concerned how they can ship a software at this stage, particularly issue 1 and 2 are very easily reproducible and I've reported them multiple times through feedback with only canned reply, and they're still not fixed after months.
Yes, your safety and security from Microsoft.
It is no accident that WPF has been reborn at BUILD 2024, as the 2nd official way to do Windows apps.
And in the end it hardly matters, as the business apps unit is now full of people that only understand Web, probably started using Windows when they joined Microsoft, and keep shipping stuff stuck into Web widgets.
it seems to be the least bad version I've encountered for an exchange client that seems compatible with modern exchange
if I had super modern exchange and had to use the latest desktop client, I'd probably just use the webclient at this point as it's probably better
ultimately, I'd take gmail over any incarnation of MS mail apps these days (including outlook 2010)
Maybe this is to prepare us for slower new Outlook?
Try that checkbox: https://www.howtogeek.com/742678/how-to-turn-off-animations-...
Didn't know it moved from Office settings to Windows settings! Although now my Start menu animation is lost... I hate these tradeoffs.
About start menu animations, I actually prefer the UX without them. I press the Win key and the menu appears, no need to wait.
I haven't used Office in over a decade. Just not a thing in startups. But teams seems to be a necessary evil to be able to talk with our customers who insist on using it. So I get exposed to that quite a bit. Horrible bit of software.
It is so easy to instantiate and use old outlook that I really fail to understand what is their endgame with this killing of a top and well respected product.
The most annoying part is the times outlook automatically updated to new outlook, of which I was not notified and could not decline. I guess it vacuumed up all my email data those times, even though I “reverted” to legacy outlook
This of course only works with exchange afaik, but why else would I use outlook.
And the "Block sender" button was missing for about a year until it was reintroduced (and now it is still missing from the mobile outlook app!). I always block sender instead of move to spam. Which MS wants to avoid people using because many spammers are their Office 365 customers too :(
This whole "cloud" lingo serves to hide technological realities and privacy implications with the only goal to improve business.
ah bugger it, add to intune - required uninstall.
Also the cloud service now have the capability to save then retrieve the credentials in plain text making them a rich target for being compromised.
Why do businesses tolerate the spying and data collection? Is there no industrial espionage? A German university advised researchers not to use Skype due to the possibility of research theft.
It's a pretty dangerous game that MSFT is playing here. What goes up can come down.
Now there is really no way of verifying what kind of access they do with your personal email data.
Basically trying to push you to paid Exchange/Office365 subscriptions.
The more aggro these big tech cos are trying to move you from buying great products to paying for overpriced subscriptions, the closer we get to them trading at their historical PEs (down ~50% from today)
An example being cable companies. They should have no capability to own TV stations, media creators, news companies, the list goes on. Backbone is backbone, be it an internet connection, or a TV/video feed.
Back to Microsoft you can make an OS, or you can make apps, but not both. An OS being a 'backbone'.
Applies to Google. "Search" vs "Ads". Backbone versus 'stuff on top'.
Really, sadly, there are cases where co-mingled stuff makes perfect sense. But bad actors are why we can't have nice things.
I wonder, there have always been jokes about how the world would be a paradise without lawyers, but would that be more MBAs in the 21st? Whether cars, or computers, or even the ladder I recently bought that is junk, it really all comes down to MBAs.
Engineers input "that's not acceptable quality", and MBAs just tromp all over that.
MBAs, the "we can't have nice things" people.
Does Google search become a paid subscription product in your vision of separation of search vs ads?
I have no detail on what precisely need be done, typically that's where experts chime in. And no, that does not invalidate my opinion.
If for example, I get food poisoning regularly from the food I buy at a supermarket, then something must be done. The problem must be fixed. The food must be rendered safe. Which means "food producers must provide safe food" is a sensible response, and then food experts enact.
So back to Apple and Google? They're broken, as all synergistic orgs are. And yes this needs to be dealt with.
But you're missing something more important. I did not specify only them, but just general division for all corporate entities. This is much larger than Google or Apple or cable companies.
Playing devils advocate, the real problem is that such solutions enacted solely on the US stage only won't work. Instead it will simply shift power to externals. You'd need to get most countries on the planet to comply, else a competitive edge would be lost in the US.
Saying this as a European who has no say in the US system but definitely feels it’s international influence
You can choose to leave your mail on the server with all mail providers.
The only difference is that now Microsoft keeps a second copy of all your mails so they can do more AI on your data
Steady market share decline trend for the past 10+ years. Lovely stuff ;)
I hope more and more people vote with their wallets and go to other platforms and tools.
For non-techies, it is not immediate obvious what the downsides even are, or why they should matter.
but... if you want co-pilot... you have to have it.
All my exec's and their PA's want it. but.. they also want Offline access to their mail.
For some reason its MY FAULT they cant have both.
so very very shit.
The chatbot interface where you can ask basic questions is still missing in the old Outlook though. But you can use the web interface at https://copilot.microsoft.com to access your emails too.
Other than that I agree, the new outlook is terrible, and it's ridiculous that it doesn't support offline email. It's really nothing more but a wrapper for the web interface.
I'm not a huge fan of copilot either. It's not nearly as capable as they try to make it look. Unfortunately all the top dogs in our company are riding the AI hype train so they must all have it.
> ... Co-pilot ...
Make that three. And beware:
> The offloading ... removes the ability for security engineers or researchers to easily inspect what the client is doing
I don’t understand why people are still using their products, I am using Linux since many years and see no problem at all with that. Plus Apple for phone, but not sure about their privacy promises…
Everyone will hate this but whatever, internal company email is dead. It causes more issues than solutions. Phishing, spam, malware, etc. It's legacy tech.
The new outlook client is linking it with more modern medium specific communication such as loop, teams, sharepoint online, one drive etc.
Yeah I know, our Microsoft consultants are constantly spamming this "Use Teams not mail" BS. And the "Why are you not using edge yet?" stuff. I really hate the Microsoft approach where every technical person must also push all the marketing drivel.
However Teams has a major problem: Discoverability. In Outlook when you communicate a lot you can move your emails to custom folders to find them back easily. In Teams you can't. Every ad-hoc chat opens up some Sharepoint site somewhere and after using Teams for a couple years it means you have thousands of locations where your information could be. It's a huge mess and there is no way to manually categorise this to find back important stuff like you could with email.