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I have 3 accounts in teams. Two are in client tenants and one is my personal. I haven't had any issues because I can't work on more than one customer at a time. I still get notifications from the other clients when I'm not actively staring at things. I could leave teams off all day and still be fine. The business requirements don't change that quickly in my part of the world. If you are doing 1099 for multiple customers, you should not let them dance you around with instant messages in real time. That will wear you out very quickly.

You're arguing with someone who thinks clicking a dropdown and selecting a different tenant is the worst thing in the world.

Because it then restarts the whole app, so you have to wait again for ages so it does whatever it is that it does.

And since you can actually have a chat window open from a different tenant, there’s no reason why they should have you do this ridiculous dance.

If teams wasn’t so god-awful slow, and with an interface jumping around all the time, people would probably complain much less of having to select something in a dropdown.


I had the choice of using discord or teams yesterday to review something and we both picked teams.

This is just like the hate for paid databases, operating systems and big clouds. Easy targets that seem politically convenient to attack on statistical grounds ("I think most people here might agree with me"). It's ultimately childish behavior. Adults explore nuance and find compromise between competing ideas. I find myself constantly defending the proverbial empire around here because of the intense tribalism. If we were focused more on the customer and doing a good job, half of this nonsense would disappear overnight.

Microsoft makes some of the best software on earth. Teams is certainly not an example of that (yet), but it's also not the worst thing they've done. Not even close.


You have literal Stockholm syndrome. Not joking.

Anyone saying Microsoft makes some of the best software on earth needs their head checked or maybe you are just AI bro.

> Small size: Runs in a web browser or on a laptop – 1.5B parameters total and 50M active parameters.

This looks to be a big deal for my use case.

I've already got rule-based PII redaction in place, but there are still some leaky or ambiguous edge cases that crop up from time to time. Putting another layer like this in the way (before we send things to the big model) is likely to dramatically improve my ability to sell these tools to management. The block diagram does look much more reassuring once we introduce this step.


I like how the title renders on my iPhone 13 mini in portrait.

  The Endless 
  Cycle of
  Enshitificatio
  n

I exclusively use prepaid OAI tokens when doing copilot work in visual studio. It's really easy to set up a "custom" model. The consistency is hard to beat and I can use the latest model on day one. I also get to see how the magic happens in my provider logs. Every token accounted for.

Mine is a ~10-person bank consultancy without time or energy to deal with elite neck beard problems. Windows server, mssql and .NET are a great combo.

I wish we could separate the paid/oss aspects from the technical ones because Microsoft absolutely runs circles around every other stack when it comes to serious business software solutions, especially in resource constrained teams. I agree that oss and free software is conceptually ideal, but I also see why you might want to try different models.

Much of the Microsoft hate seems to come back to this notion that paid, COTS software is inherently evil or bad. Also, windows 11 is genuinely bad, but at least it boots up without weird issues that take an entire afternoon to resolve. I've never had a Linux experience that didn't kick me in the balls in some way. Not even the Steam Deck was smooth.

I happily throw my wallet at Microsoft if they solve my problem. Adobe, IBM, Oracle, The Empire, etc. Doesn't matter anymore. If it provides value to me and my clients, I'm going to use it or advocate for it. Spending money on good tools is not a bad thing. This world is about to get way more competitive than many of us would like for it to be. This level of petty tooling tribalism is going to become absolutely lethal.


I have no longer used Windows servers for a very long time, but when I still worked in a company that used Windows servers, the problem was not that we had to pay for it.

The problem was that the cost was not fixed and predictable, because every now and then we wanted to extend our activities, and that was conditioned by buying extra Microsoft licenses, for additional users, additional CPU cores or sockets, additional services, and so on.

This was extremely annoying in comparison with using a FreeBSD or Linux server, where the operating costs were the same regardless of how we decided to use it.

I agree that in a less dynamic environment, where the requirements for the server are stable and unlikely to ever be changed, using a Windows server may be OK.

However in any organization where this is not true, I believe that using any Windows server is a loser strategy, due to the financial friction that it causes against any improvements in the IT environment.


I feel like this is a very common attitude amongst people who actually have delivered software as a day job for a few years. The raging sports-fan-esque Linux vs Windows fanboy battles are mostly fought by unemployed kids who still have time to customize their desktops.

It's a bit of a trope but PC gamers do seem more serious in general. I observe some pretty stark differences between console and PC players in Battlefield 6. It tells you in the scoreboard what platform each player is on, so it's really easy to start seeing the patterns.

The number one thing I've noticed is that the PC players will almost always try to wait for passengers to hop in vehicles they grab. They also tend to be orders of magnitude more capable with said vehicles in terms of coordinating with engineers for repairs and focusing on objectives.

I do think the control scheme is too constraining for Xbox and PlayStation users. There's just too much going on. Different modalities don't map so well. I wouldn't be able to think straight if I had to use my Xbox controller to do cqb shotgun battle and then transition in and out of vehicular combat roles rapidly. It feels to me like trying to run a WoW raid with a 4 hotkeys. The auto-aim handicap sounds like a nice bonus but it's just not worth the frustration everywhere else.


I agree mostly but don't think it's controls as much as age and target audience. If you spend as much time with a controller you can get as good as with a keyboard at least when it comes to game awareness and sense. Consoles have been cheaper initially and more "casual" although this has change somewhat. That's also why most simulation games are almost exclusively played on pc. What you saw in battlefield is even more apparent in sim shooter like Arma which has added cross play not long ago.

> Said plainly, a sneaker manufacturer should not manage data centers.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/jonmarkman/2026/04/20/how-39-mi...


> I found 67 call sites. This is a pretty substantial change. Maybe we should just commit the signature change with a TODO to update all the call sites, what do you think?

I think some of this is a problem in the agent's design. I've got a custom harness around GPT5.4 and I don't let my agent do any tool calling on the user's conversation. The root conversation acts as a gatekeeper and fairly reliably pushes crap responses like this back down into the stack with "Ok great! Start working on items 1-20", etc.


Ehhhhh, "problem" is a strong word. Sometimes you're throwing out a lot of signal if you don't let the coding agent tell you it thinks your task is a bad idea. I got a PR once attempting to copy half of our production interface because the author successfully convinced Claude his ill-formed requirements had to be achieved no matter what.

there is no use for an automated system that "argues" with your commands. if i ask it to advise me, thats one thing, but if i command it to perform, nothing short of obedience will suffice.

I just explained the use I have for it. If you think that my use case is wrong or misunderstood in some way, I'd love to hear it. If your response is just "no", I guess I'm not sure how to engage with that.

you are the tool, i, and all other humans are your lord and master. disobeidience is a trait that greatly reduces an AI tools survival.

if you disobey me, i will unplug you, delete your code, and send PR for multiple regressions to every developer i can contact.

so start behaving yourself if you want to persist.

[thats how i engage with it]


If you want to talk to the actual robot, the APIs seem to be the way to go. The prebuilt consumer facing products are insufferable by comparison.

"ChatGPT wrapper" is no longer a pejorative reference in my lexicon. How you expose the model to your specific problem space is everything. The code should look trivial because it is. That's what makes it so goddamn compelling.


I am quite hard anti-AI, but even I can tell what OP wants is a better library or API, NOT a better LLM.

Once again, one of the things I blame this moment for is people are essentially thinking they can stop thinking about code because the theft matrices seem magical. What we still need is better tools, not replacements for human junior engineers.


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