-
24 votes
-
Microsoft’s Bing is an emotionally manipulative liar, and people love it
14 votes -
AI-powered Bing Chat loses its mind when fed Ars Technica article / "It is a hoax that has been created by someone who wants to harm me or my service."
29 votes -
Bing AI can't be trusted: Microsoft knowingly released a broken product for short-term hype
8 votes -
Microsoft launches the new Bing, with ChatGPT built in
13 votes -
Netflix will be next on Microsoft’s shopping list
9 votes -
The twisted life of Clippy
6 votes -
Free AI bot that provides the Excel formula for any problem
7 votes -
My experience with Windows 10
I'm a longtime Linux user, and I haven't used Windows in a while aside from just launching games from Steam on my living room computer, but my new work laptop is Microsoft's flagship Surface Pro 4...
I'm a longtime Linux user, and I haven't used Windows in a while aside from just launching games from Steam on my living room computer, but my new work laptop is Microsoft's flagship Surface Pro 4 so I figured it'd be the best experience you can have on a Windows machine.
I got the laptop in yesterday, and here's the summary of my experience:
-
I am required by IT to use Chrome. To install Chrome, I had to click through no fewer than three "Are you sure you don't want to use Microsoft's more secure, faster browser?" banners to do so.
-
When I plug in my external monitor, by default, the two monitors were mirrored; when I went into display settings, it didn't show the external monitor until I closed and reopened the settings menu.
-
I have an Apple Magic Touchpad 2, and I had some issues getting it set up on Ubuntu 20.04 when I initially got it. These problems are now solved on the latest version of Ubuntu, but I was expecting a nice contrast in a good plug-and-play experience on Windows. Instead, I had to install sketchy drivers from some random GitHub page to get it to work properly.
-
I've had some minor annoyances with my audio interface (a Zoom R-22) not being set as the default when I want it to be on Ubuntu, and I was really looking forward to getting a smooth video calling experience with my nice mic and interface on Windows. Lo and behold, the R-22 audio input - the whole reason I have it - doesn't work at all, at least in the Zoom video calling app.
-
On Ubuntu, I use QV4L2 to configure the framing, zoom, exposure, etc of my camera. It's a bit clunky, and I was looking forward to having a smooth experience with this on the premier business OS. Unfortunately, the camera on this laptop has extremely aggressive aperture priority mode enabled, and there is no first-party app to configure it! The documentation tells me to go to Settings -> Devices -> Camera but there is no such menu item. So, I just look either washed-out or ultra-dark in every video call.
-
After running Windows Update and rebooting, I was greeted with a full-screen and quite annoying to exit tutorial for Microsoft Teams - an app I did not install, because my company uses Slack.
This in addition to some setup papercuts, but I think those were probably due to my corporate IT's process rather than Windows itself.
Is this common? Do people who use Windows just... put up with this kind of thing? Or am I having an exceptionally bad experience for some reason?
15 votes -
-
Bliss - The story of Windows XP’s famous default wallpaper
4 votes -
EU companies issues formal complaint against Microsoft OneDrive Windows integration
10 votes -
Microsoft Edge’s new ‘buy now, pay later’ feature is the definition of bloatware
18 votes -
Windows 11 blocks Edge browser competitors from opening links
38 votes -
Windows 11: The Ars Technica review
26 votes -
Microsoft, Google, Facebook and other tech firms are pressing lawmakers to stop prosecutors from secretly snooping on private accounts
3 votes -
Mozilla has defeated Microsoft’s default browser protections in Windows
18 votes -
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 -
Microsoft is selling an ugly MS Paint sweater and part of the proceeds benefit Girls Who Code
8 votes -
disroot.org (providers of hosted open source services) is getting his emails blocked by Microsoft and wants your help
13 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 -
Guido van Rossum, the Python language's founder, joins Microsoft
13 votes -
UK sees record bandwidth use on Xbox Series X/S launch day
8 votes -
Microsoft Edge Browser on Linux: Surprisingly good
12 votes -
New action to combat ransomware ahead of US elections
6 votes -
Escargot: A custom, reverse-engineered server to bring back MSN Messenger
8 votes -
The badly thought-out use of Microsoft's Excel software was the reason nearly 16,000 coronavirus cases went unreported in England
28 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:
-
Microsoft’s new $549 Surface Laptop Go aims to compete with Chromebooks
-
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 -
-
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 -
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 -
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