

Making their email client an enhanced version of their web client has its drawbacks but it makes development a lot easier.


Making their email client an enhanced version of their web client has its drawbacks but it makes development a lot easier.


Maybe you don’t use it? It works fine, it’s fast and caches messages/content locally.


Modern outlook downloads messages too, maybe you haven’t used it.
Many companies won’t care about end user os but are deep into the m365 ecosystem.
Hell no. Not giving the republicans any attention for desecrating the office.


Outlook classic loads instantly? No that’s a lie. It’s never loaded instantly.
Modern Outlook isn’t great but it’s a leap forward. It’s also browser based, which is good for alternative OS folks.
There’s no way I would use this. Buy a ventless dryer.


Or simply run dirty energy as a last resort. You don’t need to, and shouldn’t be, dependent on a single energy source.


Pretty typical of a new pool to bloom algae when filled. You have to dump a bunch of chlorine or bromine in to prevent it. A competent company that does large pool/ponds would have a plan to deal with it.


That’s not the flex they think it is.
“Neo is now a valid competitor at a fraction of the cost even though most games don’t run natively on it, yet.”


NREL ESIF Data Center — Golden, Colorado https://maps.google.com/?q=NREL+ESIF+Golden+CO
Sandia National Laboratories HPC — Albuquerque, New Mexico https://maps.google.com/?q=Sandia+National+Laboratories+Albuquerque+NM
Munters SyCool Deployment (Representative Location) — Phoenix, Arizona https://maps.google.com/?q=Phoenix+AZ
Switch SUPERNAP Campus — Las Vegas, Nevada https://maps.google.com/?q=Switch+SUPERNAP+Las+Vegas
Equinix SV10 IBX — San Jose, California https://maps.google.com/?q=Equinix+SV10+San+Jose+CA


Isn’t this a driver issue?


Agreed, but i would think it’s mostly an upfront cost. Datacenters have massive footprints, the roofs could be covered with heat exchangers, also covered with solar panels. It just takes some regulation to encourage it.
If you want to get really into it, you could figure out a way to reclaim all that heat energy.


Agreed. It’s updating your status to in-office and updating your office room location.
Many hybrid workforces already have software that’s doing this as part of desk hoteling.
If you’re online and not in the office, it’s not updating your location to your home address.
This is useful for coworkers to figure out where they are at so they can sit close. It might not sound like a useful feature at first but consider how large a campus like Microsoft is. Knowing what building and floor someone is at makes it much easier to work together.
Some of the other responses here make it sound like they’ve never signed in with a badge before.


This is using your office network/wifi SSID to set your location status in Teams. It’s not sharing your location when you’re nothing the office.
Also, it’s opt-in.


How did they remove all the rats?


Send 1000 drones to an area.
Program them to understand what different types of targets look like, basic maps, etc.
Program them to know what a destroyed target looks like.
Instead of 1000 drones attacking one target over and over, you get a swarm of drones moving on from destroyed targets and they can’t be stopped by communication jammers.
It’s fine unless it’s a problem for you. It’s also fine if you don’t.
Everyone self medicates in some way.
I use modern outlook daily. It’s not any slower than classic, especially when classic has any addins.
In fact it’s faster to open.
It’s better on your cpu/battery.
If you keep all of your email in your inbox like a lot of Outlook users do, it’s much faster to switch between folders and search.
Modern doesn’t fall apart when using shared mailboxes or archive mailbox like Classic does.
It’s awful at public folders.
It’s not great at browsing (not searching) for older messages as they load dynamically as you scroll after about the 3rd week.