this post was submitted on 14 May 2025
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[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 hours ago

Also Teams:

[–] [email protected] 9 points 6 hours ago

I love teams.

ever since my job has dedicated Teams as the only way to communicate I haven't been harassed as much by dumb fucks.

either their app is broken, or mine is "broken". I probably talk to 3-5 people a day vs 20-30 a day via Slack.

🎢I'm lovin it🎢

[–] [email protected] 22 points 11 hours ago

Teams is one of the worst applications I ever had to use

[–] [email protected] 54 points 14 hours ago

Teams is the most reliably unreliable piece of software.

[–] [email protected] 28 points 13 hours ago (5 children)

Serious question for anyone who knows about this sort of thing, new teams is an electron app right? Which from my understanding means it's basically just Chrome that only loads a single page? So how the fuck does it break so often!?

[–] [email protected] 5 points 5 hours ago

I work in the industry (not MSFT) on cloud reliability so I have insight.

  • The cloud itself is not as stable as some people may think. Standard is 99.9 % uptime. Which sounds great, but if your DB is 99.9 % and your compute is 99.9% and your storage is 99.9 % and your network and so on and any one of those going out breaks your application, then you don't have 99.9 % but (99.9 %)^n which is a lot less impressive. You can make things fault-tolerant through redundancy but that comes with great complexity which can cause outages of its own.
  • Apps like teams, like most B2B bullshit, provide added value by bundling together as much shit as possible. Chat, calls, calendar, spreadsheets, you name it. So now any one of those features going out individually can impact the whole app.
  • Every one of those features in the bundle is managed by a different team, possibly in a different country and coming from a different company acquisition. So now you have to glue unrelated tech stacks together which is super expensive.
  • The way you bundle things together in a SPA in a corporate environment with finite resources is by basically bundling together a bunch of iframes. Ever notice that the calendar tab on teams sometimes tells you to refresh your page to get new credentials? That's why, this fucking thing bundles its own authentication lib and barely talks to MS Teams so it can't properly refresh its tokens! If you like having one product's technical debt, now think about having 20 products' technical debt all conveniently forced to interact together in one web page!

Honestly I'm impressed by how well teams works with the very severe constraints they clearly have. Shit's got more moving parts than Ryanair's entire fleet and it only breaks once in a while.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

Because its backend is SharePoint.

[–] [email protected] 27 points 12 hours ago

because it's a cobbled-together piece of intangible complicated software, that's gone through two major iterations for no good reason.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 9 hours ago

I only ise teams for meetings on occasion for one external client, but it breaks this much when you open it up in the browser as well.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 11 hours ago

Self sabotage