Sneaking in a work from home day could soon be a bit trickier thanks to a new update coming to Microsoft Outlook.

The email provider is rolling out a new feature that will allow users to spot which of their co-workers or colleagues is currently in the office, and therefore possibly free for a quick meeting or able to reply to a message.

The update will use the Work Hours and Location information stored within Outlook to offer up this information, meaning there may be some awkward conversations if your colleagues believe you to be in the office.

In its entry in the Microsoft 365 roadmap, the company notes that the feature will be “always on”, meaning there may be no getting around what it represents as your office presence.

  • Goun@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    Boy I hate MS, and I hate Outlook, and MS Teams, and offices, and companies, and work…

    Yet, I’m failing to understand what I’m supposed to be angry about here, can someone help?

    From what I understand, you set the work hours and people will know if you’re working or not based on that…? It doesn’t sound too controversial to me.

    Do people stay home without telling anyone and they wont be able to do that anymore? Or what?

    • TipRing@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      I am in the middle of trying to get e911 functional for Teams direct route calls, based of lis data, my Teams can’t correctly determine the state I am in, much less my current address. It took multiple tickets to get our corporate headquarters to show up correctly instead of an address a half-mile away.

      I forsee getting a lot of tickets from this feature.

    • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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      6 hours ago

      It very clearly says it’ll be using your work hours and location information. MS is turning your hardware into a GPS tracker for your company.

      • Mbourgon everywhere@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Except since there’s no actual GPS tracker, it uses your IP address. Microsoft thinks I live in either Virginia or North Dakota or Florida, depending on which part of the company’s VPN I connect to.