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18 votes
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Norway says cyber attack on parliament carried out from China – attack had utilised a security hole in Microsoft's Exchange software
10 votes -
How to install Windows 3.1 on an iPad
8 votes -
How many layers of UI inconsistencies are in Windows 10?
10 votes -
Windows 11 leak reveals new UI, Start menu, and more
21 votes -
Microsoft enables Linux GUI apps on Windows 10 for developers
24 votes -
Discord has halted talks with Microsoft and other potential acquirers, is resuming interest in a future IPO
28 votes -
Microsoft in talks to buy Discord for more than $10 billion
39 votes -
title.wma - The origins of Windows XP's welcome music
3 votes -
At least 30,000 US organizations newly hacked via holes in Microsoft’s email software
19 votes -
Microsoft killed the Zune, but Zune-Heads are still here
9 votes -
I spent a year deleting my address online, then it popped up on Bing
20 votes -
Microsoft says it found malicious software in its systems
7 votes -
disroot.org (providers of hosted open source services) is getting his emails blocked by Microsoft and wants your help
13 votes -
Microsoft is selling an ugly MS Paint sweater and part of the proceeds benefit Girls Who Code
8 votes -
Microsoft's 'Project Latte' aims to bring Android apps to Windows 10
7 votes -
Project Latte by Microsoft aims to bring Android apps to Windows and the Microsoft Store
11 votes -
Microsoft reveals Pluton, a custom security chip to be built into Intel, AMD and Qualcomm processors
9 votes -
The world's first internet bench
5 votes -
UK sees record bandwidth use on Xbox Series X/S launch day
8 votes -
Guido van Rossum, the Python language's founder, joins Microsoft
13 votes -
Microsoft Edge Browser on Linux: Surprisingly good
12 votes -
Escargot: A custom, reverse-engineered server to bring back MSN Messenger
8 votes -
Microsoft announces new Surface Laptop Go and Surface Pro X
I couldn’t find a good roundup that covered both of these and didn’t want to add clutter to the front page with two posts. From The Verge: Microsoft’s new $549 Surface Laptop Go aims to compete...
I couldn’t find a good roundup that covered both of these and didn’t want to add clutter to the front page with two posts.
From The Verge:
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Microsoft’s new $549 Surface Laptop Go aims to compete with Chromebooks
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Microsoft’s updated Surface Pro X has a faster processor and new platinum color option
The Surface Pro X seems like just a spec bump, so there isn’t too much interesting there. But the Surface Laptop Go is interesting. The base model is absolute garbage (4 GB of RAM and 64 GB of EMMC storage) but the other models are somewhat decent.
The overall design of the Surface products is really striking. I honestly think they look much more modern and clean than Apple’s laptops. I also really love that they are offering colors. I wish Apple would offer more colors than just gray, silver and pink/gold on their laptops.
9 votes -
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Microsoft leaks 6.5TB in Bing search data via unsecured Elastic server
12 votes -
2020 Bundles - An overview of bundle-based offerings from major tech companies
5 votes -
Why do computers running Windows get progressively slower over time?
I promise this is a genuine question and not a Windows hit piece. Every Windows computer I've ever had has slowly gotten laggier over time until my impatience has forced me to reinstall the OS to...
I promise this is a genuine question and not a Windows hit piece.
Every Windows computer I've ever had has slowly gotten laggier over time until my impatience has forced me to reinstall the OS to get the speed boost that comes with a fresh copy. In the schools I've worked in, computer labs and carts full of Windows machines have slowly sunsetted, becoming wholly unusable over time. I think Chromebooks have taken over education in part because they have a snappiness to them that sticks around for a long time, unlike the decay demonstrated by Windows computers.
In my current job, I was issued a Windows computer and a Chromebook at the same time, when I was hired. The Chromebook is still chugging along just fine, but the once fresh and quick Windows computer is now ramping down. I know it's not because of startup or background programs latching on over time because I don't have admin rights and thus can't install anything! I'm not a power user either. I really only ever run a browser with minimal tabs, along with the very occasional instance of office software and/or PDF reader. That's it. And what used to be instant and quick is now like... trudging... through... sludge...
Is there some fundamental design flaw in Windows? Am I finding a pattern where none exists? Do I not have enough experience with other OSes to know that this is true for them too? I'd love someone's insight on this topic.
26 votes -
TikTok reaches deal to partner with Oracle, rejects Microsoft's plan
22 votes -
Leaked salary spreadsheet reveals Microsoft employee earnings for a second year
10 votes -
The Contentful DevRel team, with guests from Microsoft and Azure, are hosting weekly educational livestreams on GraphQL, React and more. Might be interesting if you are working with GraphQL!
4 votes -
Microsoft faces complex technical challenges in TikTok carveout
5 votes -
A summary of the developments over the weekend regarding Microsoft's potential acquisition of TikTok
8 votes -
Web-based rich text editor
Hi, I’m usually just overthinking my note-taking setup with plaintext markdown notes, but recently I had to create and share (as PDF) some rich text documents as well. What I’m looking for:...
Hi,
I’m usually just overthinking my note-taking setup with plaintext markdown notes, but recently I had to create and share (as PDF) some rich text documents as well. What I’m looking for:
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Collaborative editing to some extent (ideally real-time like Google Docs..)
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Rich text formatting
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Export as PDF (or even Word if possible)
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Web & mobile app (iOS)
I’m aware of Microsoft 365 with Word online and Google Docs. I really can’t stand Word online, it feels so super slow one can barely use it. I also feel the same about the application for macOS. It’s just this gigantic thing I don’t need. I want some headings, basic formatting, lists etc.
And then there’s Google Docs. It just feels wrong. It’s a weird editor, especially on mobile, it’s in this format I can’t grab, it feels like the files are not under my control.
I’m also aware of some self-hosted solutions like ONLYOFFICE and probably some NextCloud addon/solution. But these are things I don’t want either since it’s usually a hassle to install them, keep them up to date and take care of the data.
I’m just hoping that I’m missing out on something else available except the Microsoft and Google solutions.
At some point I just thought I might stick to Markdown files and export them as PDFs or even Word documents, but I don’t know about any reliable online collaboration solution for markdown docs either.
9 votes -
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Slack files competition complaint against Microsoft before the European Commission, alleging that tying Teams into Office is anti-competitive and illegal
10 votes -
Microsoft to permanently close all of its retail stores, with locations in NYC, London, Sydney, and Redmond being converted to "experience centers"
10 votes -
Is there a service where I can rent a Windows or macOS virtual machine?
Hi, hope this is the right place for this question. I'd like to learn Autodesk Fusion 360, but all of my devices are running either Ubuntu or ChromeOS. I've tried to get F360 running on my ubuntu...
Hi, hope this is the right place for this question. I'd like to learn Autodesk Fusion 360, but all of my devices are running either Ubuntu or ChromeOS. I've tried to get F360 running on my ubuntu desktop with both Wine and Lutris but I haven't had success. There is also a web application for F360 but it is feature limited.
It seems like the only way to get this program running is to use a virtual machine, but I don't have much experience in this area. Do I need to buy a windows license and set up my own VM or is there a service where I can rent time on a preconfigured VM somewhere?
Thanks for reading, hope to hear your suggestions.
8 votes -
Microsoft lays off journalists to replace them with AI
15 votes -
Munich is shifting back from Microsoft to open source
14 votes -
Microsoft is bringing Linux GUI apps to Windows 10
16 votes -
DirectX is coming to the Windows Subsystem for Linux
7 votes -
Microsoft announces the Windows Package Manager preview
20 votes -
NewsGuard and Microsoft team up to make NewsGuard free for Microsoft Edge users, Bing integration
5 votes -
Microsoft and Intel project converts malware into images before analyzing it
10 votes -
Microsoft's GitHub account allegedly hacked, 500GB stolen
11 votes -
Microsoft launches Surface Book 3
6 votes -
The safety boat: Kubernetes and Rust
6 votes -
Microsoft buys Corp.com so bad guys can’t
17 votes -
Microsoft: Cloud services demand up 775 percent; prioritization rules in place
4 votes -
The messy, secretive reality behind OpenAI’s bid to save the world
9 votes -
Microsoft Edge’s NewsGuard extension now requires a paid membership to use
5 votes