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Microsoft Teams Overtakes Slack With 13 Million Daily Users (theverge.com) 89

Microsoft is finally revealing exactly how many people are using its Slack competitor Microsoft Teams. From a report: The software maker says that more than 13 million people are using Microsoft Teams daily, along with more than 19 million weekly active users. This is the first time Microsoft has revealed an active user count, and the company's previous update was that 500,000 organizations were using the service back in March. This figure is above the more than 10 million people who use Slack daily. Slack revealed its 10 million daily active user count earlier this year, and it used the same figure back in April in a financial filing. Team communication service Slack, which has been around for much longer, was valued at north of $20 billion when it went public last month.

Further reading: Microsoft Might Crush Slack Like Facebook Crushed Snapchat.
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Microsoft Teams Overtakes Slack With 13 Million Daily Users

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  • by melted ( 227442 ) on Thursday July 11, 2019 @03:59PM (#58910044) Homepage

    Doesn't matter. The "investors" have already bought the overpriced stock. Slack is cancer anyway, the sooner MS drives this entire market segment into the ground, the better it is for everybody.

  • Where I work everyone uses Discord.
    • But for a lot of businesses, like our own, we are being encouraged to migrate to Teams from Skype for Business. That's likely the cause for increase usage. We are not a tech company, hardly use group chats, just a company using Office 365.

      For simple IM, Teams seems like overkill. Plus basing the desktop client around a web browser ensures for slow and bloated performance compared to an actual native client.

      • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

        Plus basing the desktop client around a web browser ensures for slow and bloated performance compared to an actual native client.

        I'm not sure it matters, though. If the actual native client would have ran at a blazing 100 times the required speed, while the slow and bloated browser-based version chugs along at only twice the required speed... nobody is going to care, because the requirements were met in either case.

        In the native-client scenario, of course, supporting both a web version and a native version (or more likely, several native versions, if they want to support MacOS/X and Linux and Windows) means increasing development an

  • Never heard of it.

    • Never heard of it.

      Congratulations on not running Office 365.

      • Never heard of it.

        Congratulations on not running Office 365.

        Oh. OH. Ok. No, we don't run the Office suite at all at my current job. And I really miss it. Just kidding!

        Is this what used to be called Office Communicator?

        • Is this what used to be called Office Communicator?

          Nope! They renamed Office Communicator to Lync for a few years and now it is Skype for Business [office.com] which is not compatible with Skype [skype.com]

          • by kriston ( 7886 )

            Skype for Business which is not compatible with Skype

            This makes me laugh even harder than when we found out that OneDrive for Business was not only incompatible with OneDrive it was actually SharePoint Online.

            • Skype for Business which is not compatible with Skype

              This makes me laugh even harder than when we found out that OneDrive for Business was not only incompatible with OneDrive it was actually SharePoint Online.

              Wow. I can't think of anything that might be worse than SharePoint. Except SharePoint Online.

          • "Skype for Business which is not compatible with Skype"

            Damn, they make their product names more and more specific.

  • Now it is valued $3B less than last month. I give them 5 years.

  • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Thursday July 11, 2019 @04:10PM (#58910120)
    We have Teams and Slack at work. Very few people in my company use Teams. Of course every day they automatically login to Teams when they log into Windows. Is that “active” for MS?
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Same. Work for a big hardware company, we all got automagically added to Teams, as part of the general MS business stack. No one has sent a single message in it. We all use Slack. I'm sure they're pumping the numbers with these kinds of situations.

    • Good point. My desktop still logs in to Skype every day cuz it's on by default and I'm too lazy to kill it, but I've used it maybe twice this year.
    • by kriston ( 7886 )

      This was their secret for decades.

      For a long time you couldn't even remove Skype for Business and the earlier Microsoft Lync from your computer with doing Registry edits as an Administrator.

  • by Luthair ( 847766 ) on Thursday July 11, 2019 @04:12PM (#58910132)

    Remember when they claimed 2/3rds of Windows 10 users used Edge - https://www.thurrott.com/windo... [thurrott.com]

    • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Thursday July 11, 2019 @04:20PM (#58910172)

      Remember when they claimed 2/3rds of Windows 10 users used Edge - https://www.thurrott.com/windo... [thurrott.com]

      Well, you do usually need an initial browser to download Chrome or Firefox...

    • They're probably not lying, though it's definitely worth noting that at my work, we're using Teams to replace both Slack/Mattermost, and Lync/Skype For Business.

      In a great number of cases, it's likely that people are jumping from Microsoft's old, terrible product to their newer, better one. Lync or whatever you want to call it was a nightmare, and Teams is a step up. I don't know that Teams is better than Slack or Mattermost, but it'll do.

      • by jezwel ( 2451108 )

        I don't know that Teams is better than Slack or Mattermost, but it'll do.

        Exactly why Microsoft Teams will take over from Slack. Big corps are full of users that need the basics and not much more.

    • Remember when they claimed 2/3rds of Windows 10 users used Edge - https://www.thurrott.com/windo... [thurrott.com]

      Yeah except as part of a standard corporate package for Office 365, complete integration with Sharepoint services, Onenote, and Outlook, along with them progressively destroying Skype, I'm inclined to believe them.

      • by kriston ( 7886 )

        along with them progressively destroying Skype

        To be fair, Skype for Business is Skype in name only. It isn't Skype at all.

        At least with consumer Skype they're listening. They did bring back the non-Metro Windows client after customer backlash.

        • I'm talking about Skype for Business. Every update seems to make the software worse. Since our backend servers have been upgraded we end up with more connectivity problems than ever before. I now suffer a myriad of issues where I'm able to join and hear calls but unable to share desktops because they decoupled these two functions and seemingly broke one of them.

          Skype for Business's one benefit that gives it some serious staying power is the ability to federate between corporations which means in my phoneboo

    • by epine ( 68316 )

      Remember when they claimed 2/3rds of Windows 10 users used Edge?

      Coming up with new and surprising ways to count users is how Microsoft kept itself propped up at the top of the "innovation" chart for decades and decades.

      Microsoft does not innovate technology, but they do innovate business methods, as Netcraft confirms.

  • by GoRK ( 10018 ) on Thursday July 11, 2019 @04:35PM (#58910250) Homepage Journal

    I'm sure that bundling Teams into the Office365 installer and forcing it to load on startup without the ability to turn it off until you sign into the app has nothing to do with why there are suddenly 13 million users.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

      Errr Teams does not run on startup by default. You actually have to open it first time to do so.

      Also there aren't "suddenly" 13 million users. This has been a process of feature creep while slowly attempting to shit on Skype.

      Expect 13.1million users assuming the rest of the world does absolutely nothing by the end of the year since we've been told by IT that Skype is getting disabled in December and to jump on the latest bandwagon now.

      And managers *will* jump on this bandwagon, just when some MS rep shows s

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        It does run on startup on my >40.000 people "company".

        • by Anonymous Coward

          also automatically installs itself

          microsoft is installing the software themselves and then calling each machine they installed the software on a user

          misleading is an understatement

      • by waspleg ( 316038 )

        My manager recently added all of us to a Team for this. We haven't used it. I'm certain no one will unless forced.

  • They are different comms models.

    TV didn't kill books
    IM didn't kill email
    slack didn't kill email

    Userbase is irrelevant.

    I classify them on their goals and asynchronicity

    Email - completely async - good archival - good for COOPERATION (can digest periodically and not get interrupted)
    BB model (eg redit) - somewhat async - somewhat archival
    Teams - (sits here) part BB part chat - doesn't do anything well, but does everything only slightly terribly.
    Chat (eg Slack) - mostly realtime stream of consciousness (+ addons

    • by nadass ( 3963991 )

      Teams - (sits here) part BB part chat - doesn't do anything well, but does everything only slightly terribly. Chat (eg Slack) - mostly realtime stream of consciousness (+ addons) for realtime COLLABORATION (need to monitor continuously to get value, but get faster answers).

      So you clearly don't know what Teams does!

      Teams is several modes of collaboration and communication rolled into one: Skype/IM, Skype/VoIP, Yammer/Chat, Yammer/Docs, Multi-channel (Slack/Chat) via Outlook Groups/Yammer Groups, BB via add-ons, 100% archival, 100% online-content embeddable (a la SharePoint, Office Online).

      The only thing Teams is NOT is completely async e-mail.

  • I'm wondering if he has an @microsoft.com email address...

  • Discord has 14M DAUs.
    • by geekoid ( 135745 )

      MS didn't leverage the Monopoly to attack discord, the did it to attack slack.

      I'm sure Discord will be attacked by MS soon.

  • Since MS forced it on many, many business 'partners' specifically to leverage there install base against Slack.

  • Kill off Slack
    Profit!
    Unless the EU or the USA decide to go anti-trust on Microsoft... again.

    Microsoft began as a bunch of evil bastards. Unsurprisingly it still is.

  • Let's see how many iterations of chat applications Microsoft produced and discontinued over the years. Some of these are completely separate apps, e.g. Skype for Business wasn't even Skype.

    Microsoft Communicator
    Microsoft Lync
    Skype for Business
    Windows Messenger
    Microsoft Office Communicator
    Exchange Instant Messaging

    And this doesn't even include MSN Messenger, a.k.a. Windows Live Messenger.

  • Quite many organisations use office 365, and have used the fairly good Skype for business for phone conferences. It is actually pretty good for that.

    But starting at some point Microsoft prompts to "Upgrade" to teams for any such installation whenever anyone with admin rights logs in.

    The "Upgrade" removes the fairly goof Skype for business and dongrades the organization to teams. The teams is a LOT worse for phone conferences and no organization that I know actually uses the chat.

    So it is just switching use

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