The quality of Office is very rapidly declining; it seems that the entire team has moved to forcing AI into every feature instead of fixing any issues. The web version is barely usable (esp compared to Google's versions) and the desktop is quickly getting worse seemingly every day.
I have not used Azure for a few years now; back when I did use it, it seemed pretty good.
That applies to all teams not only Office, even Aspire now has AI on the dashboard, and they proudly made use of AI building the new Aspire CLI experience.
A lot of comments here kind of miss the point, but that's to be expected because you can only really get it when you have the experience. Like hearing a description of a painting will not give you the same emotion as looking at it yourself.
Zig has completely changed the way I program (even outside of it). A lot of the goals and heuristics I used to have while writing code have completely changed. It's like seeing programming itself in a new way.
If managers are pushing a clearly not-working tool, it makes perfect sense for workers to complain about this and share their experiences. This has nothing to do with the future. No one knows for sure if the models will improve or not. But they are not as advertised today and this is what people are reacting to.
We are running mapserver in production in the cloud (AWS lambda) to visualize lots of different data using WMS. We're also doing lots of processing using GDAL in the cloud as well. Compared to ESRI it's amazingly cost effective even considering Amazon's high prices.
nice. If you aren't already familiar, you might be interested in this platform
for Dutch geospatial data: https://github.com/PDOK . They use mapserver on the cloud at massive scale, and all of their infra is open.
By definition they are social apps, so it's not usually up to just individuals whether to use them. For example if I stopped using what's app I'd cut myself off from the majority of my friends and family.
This is probably not true. If it is, if your ties are so weak that they rely on an app, maybe it is ok to let them go and seek stronger social ties elsewhere.
For me, the biggest problem is its startup time (it takes at least 30-60s on my work laptop). It also randomly crashes for me when viewing any postgis related result sets.
I think it's more the other way around. How did SurveyMonkey convince Serena Williams to be on their board? Her husband may well have played a role. (Sure, it's not a huge time commitment, but it's not zero either, and I would imagine she has plenty of other organizations and people competing for her attention.)
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