No it’s not, it’s not in excel it’s in their cloud.
Libra has had ACTUAL python since before Microsoft decided to stop adding new features to office that weren’t rent seeking
“in the cloud”
Well, the firm I work for won’t ever implement it then. Back to pandas, nothing to see here.
Microsoft has been slowly building toward requiring these subscriptions for enterprise for some time now. That is where Windows365 is ultimately going at an enterprise level, management just doesn’t realize it yet or are aware of how powerless they are to stop it.
Because Microsoft should’ve been broken up in the 90s. They definitely need to be broken up now. Same with a number of companies really, but Microsoft has a unique position to really hold enterprise and government by the balls.
I’d love to see how that will go over with companies that handle sensitive or legally restricted data.
I don’t know if it’s a blessing or a complete nightmare…
Well one thing we can all agree on: it is a blessing to non-working capitalists who own huge stakes of Microsoft.
Because this will require expensive per-seat subscriptions to their Power Platform or Azure Services. And if Power Platform is any indication, likely some features of Python will be gated behind per-use models on top of that.
Are MS now going to make a MSPython, and break actual python?
Who wants a wager?
P# incoming
I can, but I won’t