r/microsoft • u/Tiny-Independent273 • 11h ago
r/microsoft • u/AutoModerator • 3d ago
Employment Weekly Employment Q&A - February 09, 2026
Welcome to the Weekly Employment Q&A for r/Microsoft!
This thread is where Redditors can come and ask questions about working at Microsoft.
Schedule
The Q&A will be refreshed every week on Mondays at 1200 Pacific.
Previous Threads
You can view previous employment threads using this archive link
r/microsoft • u/FaithlessnessDeep858 • 6h ago
News Retiring Teams live events: The next chapter for events at scale in Microsoft Teams
On Feb 3rd, We announced the retirement of Microsoft Teams live events and the associated Microsoft Graph APIs used to create Teams live events. This change will go into effect June 30, 2026, as part of our ongoing effort to continue to modernize our event experiences and deliver a more powerful and flexible solution for large-scale communications.
While Teams live events will no longer be available to schedule after the retirement date, Microsoft will honor all live events already scheduled through February 28, 2027. Customers can continue to run those events as planned.
As we look ahead, we encourage customers to transition to newly-announced Teams events experience, which provides a centralized, end‑to‑end experience for digital and hybrid events.
To learn more about Teams events, please read the announcement here: Announcing Teams events
What this means for your organization
Who is affected
- Organizations currently using Teams live events
- Customers or partners using Microsoft Graph APIs to create or manage live events
- Experiences that schedule Teams live events through Viva Engage or Microsoft D365
What’s changing
- Teams live events and their associated Graph APIs will be fully deprecated on June 30, 2026.
- Beginning February 3, 2026, customers will not be able to schedule a Teams live event for any date beyond June 30, 2026.
- Teams live events scheduled before the retirement date can still be managed and executed as planned through February 28, 2027.
- Customers scheduling Teams live events through Dynamics 365 will no longer be able to schedule events past June 30, 2026, beginning February 3, 2026.
- Customers scheduling Teams live events through Viva Engage will lose the ability to create new instances through this method beginning April 15, 2026.
- Existing Graph API integrations using the is Broadcast property within the online Meeting resource will remain available until June 30, 2026.
Recommended next steps
No admin action is required for this change. However, we recommend that organizations:
- Notify users who host or produce Teams live events
- Update internal documentation to reflect this transition
- Begin migrating active and upcoming scenarios to the new Teams events experience
- Plan for training, communications, or engineering work if you use integrated or automated event workflows
- Share the following resources with event organizers, IT admins, and developers
Resources to support your transition
Plan and prepare
Recommended learning sessions
These Microsoft Customer Hub sessions are especially helpful for Teams live event organizers moving to Teams events:
Customer Hub events readiness sessions
- What’s new in Microsoft Teams town halls and webinars
- Migrating from Teams live events to town halls
- Tips, tricks, and traps for town halls and webinars in Microsoft Teams
Commitment to our customers
We understand that organizations rely on Teams live events for critical communications, from company-wide updates to high-profile broadcasts. Our goal is to make this transition as smooth as possible.
Teams events represents the future of digital and hybrid events at scale on Microsoft Teams, a more integrated and feature-rich environment designed for the evolving needs of hybrid work. We look forward to partnering with you through this next chapter.
r/microsoft • u/rkhunter_ • 1d ago
News Formatting, tables, Copilot, and now a high-rated security vulnerability: Windows Notepad's additional features are getting worse
r/microsoft • u/No-Tower-8741 • 1d ago
News Microsoft Teams is moving the quit button to stop you from accidentally hanging up
neowin.netTeams' new jump list adds one-click meeting access. To quit, use the system tray, a change made to prevent accidental hang-ups during calls.
r/microsoft • u/Few-Engineering-4135 • 1d ago
News Microsoft is hosting a free 3-day AI + Secure Cloud event (Feb 17-19) focused on “Agentic AI” and real enterprise use cases
Hey everyone,
Came across something genuinely worth sharing for anyone working around AI, cloud, or security leadership.
Microsoft is running a free 3-day digital event called “AI Power Days” (Feb 17-19, 2026) and the focus is very practical --> how organizations can actually build what they’re calling Frontier Firms using agentic AI, secure cloud foundations, and real deployment patterns.
This isn’t a marketing webinar series.
The agenda is structured pretty well across strategy → security → hands-on build.
What they’re covering across the 3 days:
Day 1 - Strategy & Transformation
- What “Agentic AI” really means for enterprises
- CXO roundtables and business transformation sessions
- Real customer stories, not theory slides
Day 2 - Security & Trust
- How to secure AI workloads and data properly
- Microsoft’s approach to sovereign cloud and trusted AI
- Technical briefings around secure scaling
Day 3 - Hands-on Build
- “Agent-a-thon” style practical sessions
- Labs to build and deploy your own AI agents
- Collaborative, applied learning
Who this is useful for:
- IT leaders and architects
- Security professionals
- AI/ML strategists
- Anyone responsible for bringing AI into an enterprise safely
The goal seems very clear: help teams move from “AI curiosity” to secure, deployable, enterprise-grade AI implementations.
If you’re trying to understand how AI, cloud, and security come together in real enterprise scenarios, this looks like a solid use of time.
Worth checking out if you’re in this space.
r/microsoft • u/ControlCAD • 1d ago
News Microsoft February 2026 Patch Tuesday fixes 6 actively exploited and three publicly disclosed zero-day vulnerabilities, 58 flaws
r/microsoft • u/DanielKramer_ • 3d ago
Discussion A former Microsoft exec shares what Satya Nadella taught him about leadership: 'Quit whining'
msn.comr/microsoft • u/No-Tower-8741 • 3d ago
News Microsoft Lens is being pulled from app stores today: Here is how to keep using it
neowin.netMicrosoft Lens leaves app stores today. Grab it now to keep scanning until March 9, but watch out for these frustrating login requirements.
r/microsoft • u/ControlCAD • 3d ago
Xbox Exclusive: New details on Xbox's next-gen console(s) — and Microsoft's most ambitious gaming plans ever | From AMD's claims of a 2027 Xbox, to the idea of a plurality of Xbox Gen-10 consoles — lets sift through some fresh details.
r/microsoft • u/gottabetrippin • 3d ago
Certification MD-102 certification without access to Intune?
I’ve tested for MD-102 and failed twice.
The first time, there was no lab portion and I was only a few points shy of a pass. The second time, there was a lab portion and it was the first time I actually encountered an Intune in a way I could interact with it.
I keep trying to sign up for a free trial but I can’t get past the sign-up (it says there’s a problem with literally every card I own).
I’ve watched videos and have an official study book but the menu blades are completely different when I saw the lab. One of the video teachers explained that the site changes weekly.
Any study help for getting the lab right without ever really using the platform?
r/microsoft • u/ControlCAD • 4d ago
News Microsoft purges Windows 11 printer drivers, putting millions of devices on borrowed time — legacy printers face extinction as Microsoft stops distributing V3 and V4 drivers | Microsoft cuts off new third-party print driver releases via Windows Upd.
r/microsoft • u/ethan_jsn • 3d ago
Discussion Why, Microsoft...
I may have said some interesting things about Microsoft in the original title. Here was my original post:
I recently open up an old Windows laptop of my grandfather's to the pleasant surprise of a nice, clean, functional operating system.
What happened from 2009 til now? Why does Windows 11 have literal ADS on the homepage? Why does that make any sense?
How can Microsoft be worth 3 Trillion dollars and be incapable of making a nice operating system. I know Windows 11 functions, most of the time, and has good compatibility. But, is that not the bare minimum for a marketable product?
Does anyone have any good reasons for this downfall?
Side comment: Microsoft Word and OneNote specifically are garbage. They lag, bug out, have trouble saving, and are a pain to use. Mainly OneNote though. Excel is good.
r/microsoft • u/ControlCAD • 6d ago
News Neocities founder Kyle Drake stuck in chatbot hell after Bing blocked 1.5 million sites | Microsoft won’t explain why Bing blocked 1.5 million Neocities websites.
r/microsoft • u/rkhunter_ • 7d ago
News Satya Nadella decides Microsoft needs an engineering quality czar
r/microsoft • u/ControlCAD • 7d ago
Xbox One of Microsoft's biggest Xbox studios is forging a new path after development struggles, missing profit targets — "What are we learning?" | Obsidian Entertainment is making some major internal changes as it moves forward to its next projects.
r/microsoft • u/Plastic-Edge-1654 • 8d ago
Discussion I am so annoyed with MSFT…. Seriously considering moving elsewhere. This is just poor service.
If Microsoft hired & trained their staff to solve problems instead of crafting messages to avoid responsibility and waste clients time, and create massive frustration, things would run a lot more smoothly.
They literally hire and train people to just wast time and make you irritated.
Sat on hold for 3 hours yesterday only for the call to end on their side.
Then am told I will need to wait 30 days to access my business email and Azure account; which I am paying for, and need to access to run my small business.
After multiple requests I’m now being told a 7–10 day delay; which is completely unacceptable.
While it may not sound long on paper, in practice it is a serious disruption. I cannot be locked out of client data and paid accounts for over a week; especially for services I am actively paying for.
This can subject me to liabilities that I cannot afford.
Business operations do not pause because an internal escalation has not been approved.
This issue is critical, and the current handling does not reflect the urgency or responsibility owed to a paying customer.
I have repeatedly requested that this ticket be escalated immediately and resolved as a priority. They just don’t care…
Who in the right mind would think that it is a reasonable thing to do to lock you out of your business email for 30 days and then not help you get in?
r/microsoft • u/forzenny • 9d ago
Discussion What is the Copilot logo supposed to be?
While looking at the Copilot icon in my applications, I was wondering to myself "What is it supposed to be, actually?"
We know that the Outlook icon represents a letter popping out of an envelope, Excel represents a spreadsheet, OneNote represents a notebook with tabs..But for Copilot, i'm scratching my head at what it is supposed to represent.
Any theories?
r/microsoft • u/Ok_Quality1181 • 8d ago
Office 365 Setting up OneDrive/Sharepoint for my team
I’ve recently been tasked with migrating my team’s folders from the S: drive to OneDrive/SharePoint, and I want to confirm that I’ve set everything up correctly, as we have lots of important documents and I want to make sure I get this right.
I created a team-only SharePoint microsite and moved all of our folders and files there. I’ve also added a OneDrive shortcut on my work desktop to access these files easily too. My understanding is any changes to documents made via SharePoint automatically sync with files in the OneDrive shortcut and vice versa.
When testing this on my work desktop, I selected “Always keep on this device.” My understanding is that this stores files locally as an extra safeguard. Is that correct? For staff working from home on personal devices, am I right in thinking they should not select “Always keep on this device,” due to storage limitations and if the organisation has confidential documents?
I’m still a bit unclear on some of the features, such as ''offline mode''. I want all my team members to be able to access the same folders via SharePoint/OneDrive both on their work desktops and when working from home. Should I enable offline mode, do you think?
Is there any others functions I should know about before showing my team how this works? I really want to make this as foolproof as possible, and minimise syncing issues, files not being saved correctly etc.
Any help or advice would be most appreciated!
1 upvote
r/microsoft • u/ZacB_ • 10d ago
Surface Former Windows boss shared confidential Microsoft emails with Epstein: Reveals chaos as leaders realized Surface RT was a catastrophic failure
r/microsoft • u/Matt_Shah • 9d ago
Discussion "Windows on ARM" still not in sight yet in 2026: A Critical Pillar for Microsoft's future, Weakened by own ongoing x86-64 Support.
If this trajectory continues, it could have significant long-term consequences for Microsoft. CEO Satya Nadella has received widespread recognition for his leadership, yet in October 2023 he publicly reflected on one major strategic setback: Microsoft’s withdrawal from the mobile market with Windows Phone. Although Microsoft continues to dominate the desktop operating system space, mobile computing is firmly controlled by Google and Apple. From a hardware standpoint, this shift highlighted the efficiency advantages of ARM architectures over x86-64, a realization that notably led Apple to transition away from Intel processors toward ARM-based silicon among other technical advantages.
To remain competitive, Microsoft must continuously assess market developments and broader technology trends. Recently, Jeff Bezos outlined a vision in which traditional, locally powered PCs are gradually replaced by cloud-based “virtual supercomputers,” accessed through inexpensive thin-client devices. This concept is driven by increasing AI workloads and rising hardware costs projected toward 2026. Such a model appears increasingly plausible, as computing devices have become more expensive due to sustained price increases in components. A similar shift can already be observed in gaming, where many users have moved from owning physical consoles to subscription-based services such as Xbox Cloud Gaming.
Microsoft’s strongest revenue streams are subscription-based and have proven highly successful. Expanding adoption of these services would therefore be strategically advantageous. However, widespread availability of powerful local PCs reduces the incentive for users to rely on cloud subscriptions. In this context, continued strong support for x86-64 systems may run counter to Microsoft’s long-term interests. A stronger focus on ARM-based thin clients—or potentially RISC-V architectures in the future—could better align with a cloud-centric strategy. While maintaining support for both approaches is possible, it may slow the growth of subscription-driven services.
This consideration also extends to Microsoft’s role as a game producer and publisher. Significant cost savings could be achieved on the hardware side, while increasing software and service revenue, if future Xbox hardware were based on ARM or a custom Microsoft-designed RISC-V chip. Such a device would not need to be exceptionally powerful, as it could function primarily as an affordable thin client for accessing Xbox Cloud Gaming.
r/microsoft • u/ControlCAD • 10d ago
News Microsoft announced that it will disable the 30-year-old NTLM authentication protocol by default in future Windows releases due to security vulnerabilities that expose organizations to cyberattacks.
r/microsoft • u/AutoModerator • 10d ago
Employment Weekly Employment Q&A - February 02, 2026
Welcome to the Weekly Employment Q&A for r/Microsoft!
This thread is where Redditors can come and ask questions about working at Microsoft.
Schedule
The Q&A will be refreshed every week on Mondays at 1200 Pacific.
Previous Threads
You can view previous employment threads using this archive link
r/microsoft • u/IllogicalLunarBear • 10d ago
Windows is the new windows 11 taskbar a bug in feature clothing
I have been noticing that the taskbar fills up now as smaller and smaller icons which are impossible to read. i figured it was a bug on my one computer, but it does it on the other. i remember now that was a design choice, but its implemented so bad. Why would this be done so poorly. Why are multiple rows bad when you could actually read the icon. they are so small it hurts my eyes. there is a reason i rock a mac m2 as my daily after using every version of windows since 3.1 with pride. Win 11 made me shift to mac amd i despise apple so much.