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Antiwork

Migrating to Office 365: talk me down from quitting

I work for a state agency that barely functions as it is, the only saving grace for being that it was easier to teach colleagues who struggle with sending email and saving files how to use Google apps. This was not my role, btw, but it often fell to me because I have an instructional background and was fortunately one of the few not tied up in fruitless meetings all day. Friends, I can’t. I can’t go back to dealing with fucking Office 365 and I sure as hell don’t want to teach it to people who, two years later, still can’t understand why they don’t need to hit “reply-all” to acknowledge every email they receive. If we have to spend the next six months migrating shit for no other reason than to justify the number of IT contractors we have, I will lose my my mind. What could possibly…


I work for a state agency that barely functions as it is, the only saving grace for being that it was easier to teach colleagues who struggle with sending email and saving files how to use Google apps. This was not my role, btw, but it often fell to me because I have an instructional background and was fortunately one of the few not tied up in fruitless meetings all day.

Friends, I can’t. I can’t go back to dealing with fucking Office 365 and I sure as hell don’t want to teach it to people who, two years later, still can’t understand why they don’t need to hit “reply-all” to acknowledge every email they receive.

If we have to spend the next six months migrating shit for no other reason than to justify the number of IT contractors we have, I will lose my my mind. What could possibly be the justification for this?

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