As a general rule, when trillion-dollar companies don’t like regulation, it simply means they’re admitting the rules are good for their customers.

  • @Ashe
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    123 months ago

    I love going to Entra (azure), the authentication manager (admin, legacy and Entra), the defender dashboard for DLP, wait no compliance, and then uh, what license do I need for this? It’s a NIGHTMARE navigating their depreciated shit. Absolutely unreal

    • Scrubbles
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      3 months ago

      I’m in the middle of integrating (ugh) Entra, and 99% of the documentation is marketing bullshit in a circlejerk about how proud they are that they… changed the name.

      • PowderhornOP
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        113 months ago

        Feels like everything’s written in that self-congratulatory treacly voice these days. Most products are the equivalent of the little McDonald’s hamburger with reconstituted onions and two anemic pickle slices but sold as though they have Michelin stars.

        • @Zworf@beehaw.org
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          3 months ago

          Yes that’s the exact feeling I have. Fast food.

          We’ve been moving from a lot of best-in-class services to Microsoft ones and this is exactly it. They’re always just good enough to be passable but never great at what they do. The only real benefit they have is that a lot of stuff is “free” with other things (how Teams is killing slack despite being piss-poor) and that everything integrates better with Windows. And they’re always behind the competition, like Intune was much much worse than the competing MDMs when we had to use it, and they’ve only kinda caught up by now.

          It’s a smart move because even if you do have an AAA product sooner or later some smartass manager is going to be looking to make a name for themselves and cut costs with something that’s ‘free’.

    • @Zworf@beehaw.org
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      33 months ago

      EntraID is pretty much the only time a MS rebranding actually makes sense because Azure Active Directory was confusing as hell.

      All the other ones, like Lync -> Skype, Yammer -> Viva, Intune -> MEM were just marketing running wild for the sake of it and putting their customers up with the burden. And CoPilot is a disaster because they’re dumping a whole load of different products under the same labeling and nobody knows what the hell is what anymore, even experts.

      • @Ashe
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        23 months ago

        It’s insane. The documentation is often times half accurate and feels like navigating a minefield of half truths, depreciations and context clues to find the solution to problems.

        • @Zworf@beehaw.org
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          3 months ago

          YES! So true.

          Many times something doesn’t work, you log a ticket and they’re like “according to the docs it should work so you’re doing something wrong” and you get into an endless loop of providing logfiles and doing random updates because really their ‘premium’ support (which isn’t even microsoft but accenture) has no clue whatsoever. They don’t know anything more than anyone who read the docs. It’s like you’re in a courtroom and you have to prove your innocence before they’re going to lift a finger to help you. At least in a real court you’re innocent until proven guilty 🤦‍♂️

          Then eventually after a month or two you bug your account manager enough that they finally escalate the issue to someone who actually knows something at microsoft and they’re like “oh yeah that feature doesn’t work properly, try this”. I mean for real. 🤬 So much wasted time.

      • @Ashe
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        33 months ago

        Only if you have an E5 license! If you have an E3 it’s still compliance and you can trial purview features