Teams: Its Future Seems to Be Emulating the Feature-itis of MSFT Word

December 10, 2020

Someone asked me to test Zoom in 2016, maybe earlier. It was a lot more useful than Freeconference.com’s IBM video service which was available to me at the time. Zoom is getting more cluttered. I have to deal with automated calendar, endless updates, icon litter, and weird controls scattered across the Web site, the app for my Mac Mini, and the Web browser implementation. I can record and probably acquire a Zoom brain implant add in.

But Microsoft Teams makes Zoom’s accretion of wonkiness look very 16th century. I read “Features Added to Microsoft Teams in November 2020 Update.” My reaction was a question, “Has Microsoft discovered its next Microsoft Office?” (I was tempted to mention Microsoft Bob and Microsoft SharePoint, but I de-enthusiasmed myself.)

What’s Teams do? For starters, you can check out Microsoft’s explanation of “more ways to be a team.” Typical of thumbtypers’ marketing woo woo, Teams is linked to Microsoft 365. Okay, I get it a subscription and/or volume licensing with a dollop of lock in. Imagine. meet, chat, call, and collaborate in just one place. Also, one can:

  • Instantly go from group chat to video call with the touch of a button.
  • Securely connect, access, share, and coauthor files in real time.
  • Stay organized by keeping notes, documents, and your calendar together.

However, Teams is an application environment too. The November 2020 write up points out:

Microsoft now made the new Power Apps app for Teams generally available. It allows you to create and deploy custom apps without leaving Teams. With the straightforward , embedded graphical app studio, it’s never been easier to create low code apps for Teams. you’ll also harness immediate value from inbuilt templates just like the Great Ideas or Inspections apps, which may be deployed in one click and customized easily. The new Power Apps app for Teams are often backed by a replacement relational datastore – Dataverse for Teams.

The “dataverse.” That’s similar to my term “datasphere,” but the datasphere exists and includes the dataverse in my opinion.

Yep, the “world” of Microsoft. What’s interesting is that Salesforce understands that Microsoft’s response to Zoom may be the start of a new bit thing. Even Amazon has joined the party with its mostly ignored Chime thing. (Amazon AWS provides the zoom for Zoom, so for now, the Bezos bulldozer is carving new revenue paths in other markets.) And Google is active in this sector as well, but for the life of me, I cannot recall the name of the conference/messaging service du jour. Google sells ads and will probably get serious when a US government Department of Energy conference call can be enhanced with an advertisement from Duke Energy or Exxon).

One thing is clear in my opinion: Microsoft Teams has the feature-itis affliction. I was at a Microsoft meeting years ago when one of the Softies pointed out that 95 percent of Word users relied on fewer than 10 functions.

What do I do when I use Zoom? Participate in a video call. If I need to take notes, I use a pencil and paper. If I need to add an event to my calendar, I write it in my monthly planner. If I want to zone out, I post a background that shows me looking at the camera and nodding.

Keep it simple? Not likely.

Stephen E Arnold, December 10, 2020

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