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What’s the path to MS365 integration? Thats where all my work is


Working on it at the moment, would be interested in learning more about the actions/events you would need to make it useful.


To even consider for enterprise M365 use, it needs to be 1:1 with Power automate/Flows/Apps, Entra, Intune, Graph API, PowerShell, AAD/Azure, etc. If I need to create a new user, it's going to involve every corner of M365/Azure. Maybe getting full functionality with Flows and PowerApps would be a starting point.


Same. Frankly this is the only thing keeping me buying thinkpads. I must be in the minority…?


For me, a laptop without the track point is a total deal breaker. Why would I wish to remove my hands from the keyboard?


I would


AI will help us develop technology to explore the universe and solve climate change, and access virtually unlimited energy. Everyone will have superpowers. Sounds awesome and very fun.


I am in the same situation. Disc herniation, post surgery, doing pt every day and no material improvement in 3 years. Ive tried many pt programs. My time is under extreme pressure.

I need to stop sitting, and revert to a hunter gatherer movement pattern of walking, running and crouching. Unfortunately i live in nyc and my desk job may kill me.

If we can use AI+VR/AR to put an end to desk work, it will dramatically benefit billions of souls.


> I am in the same situation. Disc herniation, post surgery, doing pt every day and no material improvement in 3 years. Ive tried many pt programs. My time is under extreme pressure.

Ah, we’re in very similar situations. I’m sorry to hear of your struggles. I unfortunately know too well what you’re enduring. I wouldn’t wish this on anyone.

I had severe cervical myelopathy where my spine severely compressed my spinal cord, causing permanent damage. I underwent a cervical decompression and ACDF, but I’ll live with an incomplete spinal cord injury and its consequences for life.

On top of that, I have a herniated disc and Tarlov cysts in my lower lumbar spine. As if the cervical issues weren’t enough, I now fall randomly, making staying upright a constant challenge. The pain from both issues is so severe and relentless, I struggle to even explain it other than to note that it is "life altering."

I’m a few years out, and we’ve now discovered that my cervical spine is compressed again, along with nerves on the right side of my body. I started another physio program through my pain management team, but its not helping, more surgery is the only real solution. Still, I have to stick with physio because, as my medical team says, I need to be fitter than most people to manage my condition. Things are difficult enough that I don’t have the energy to question their guidance. What little energy I do have goes toward trying to stay employed.

> I need to stop sitting, and revert to a hunter gatherer movement pattern of walking, running and crouching.

I have a sit-stand desk and alternate between standing and sitting throughout the day for pain management. I’ll stand and pace for an hour, then sit for a while. It helps with pain in the moment, but I’m not sure it does much more than that.


I dont feel this at all. I treat chatgpt like an investment banking intern.


It would be great if i could chat with chatgpt and it could book it for me, like a travel agent


There is potential for an excellent experience but it is far from the average one. If you have a technical person set up home assistant and keep physical switches (eg lutron caseta), everyone can win. But most people who buy a smart bulb have never heard of home assistant and may not have the patience or ability to learn. I think HA could do a better job at attracting and onboarding the average consumer.


Whats the best corporate wiki platform?


Probably a hard question to answer. IME, cultural norms around documentation vary pretty wildly.

Some orgs I've worked for were very "wiki" driven - there's a big expectation of using Confluence or Notion to navigate documentation. This applies both big (5000+) and small (50+) organizations for me.

Other organizations I've worked in were very document centric - so you organize things in folders, link between documents (GDoc @SomeDocument or MSFT's equivalent). Those organizations tend to pass around links to documents or "index" documents. Similarly, this applies for both big and small organizations in my experience.

Of the two, I tend to prefer the latter. Without dedicated editors, the wiki version seems to decay rapidly, especially once the org grows above some size.

Knowledge management is hard...


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