Microsoft's fake community websites and Q&A, Episode Two


Recommended Posts

Hello, Earthlings! 😊

On 28 May 2023, Neowin reported that Blizzard's so-called Q&A session was fake. I commented, "What an utterly Microsoft kind of behavior! It's no wonder Microsoft is buying Activision Blizzard. After all, birds of a feather flock together. A little context: Microsoft has been staging fake Q&A and community websites since at least 2000." In the wake of that comment, several of you asked for (or, should I say, insisted on seeing) evidence. Thus, this thread was born.

In the previous episode, I introduced you to people whose claim of being Microsoft's "independent advisors" didn't match their hands-on knowledge. To wit, one of them claimed to be "an installation specialist" and bore the Microsoft-issued badges of "moderator" and "MVP," but showed the technical expertise of a malfunctioning version of ChatGPT. Our supervisor, Nick H., likened this person to "an expert from Microsoft [who phoned] me the other day because they had noticed that my computer was riddled with viruses...I had fun with him!"

Today, we take a look at a fake interview.

Episode 2: Fake interviews!

The fake interview

On 25 June 2019, Microsoft published an interview entitled "Windows 10 Enterprise vs. Windows 10 Pro," with two "Technology Solutions Professionals specializing in Windows deployments," Nick Moseley and Shawn Porter.

When this so-called "interview" went live, commenters butchered it.

  • All three commenters mentioned that the interview doesn't discuss its topic. It doesn't mention any of Windows 10 features.
  • User "wroot"  slammed the whole article as the work of one PR person.
  • User "MasterMysterious" mentioned a typographical omission that couldn't have happened in an interview.

I've noticed that the article contains the phrase "and/or," a meaningless construct that only appears in writing, mostly in legal texts. In addition, it contains nothing technical or otherwise worth reading.

Genuine interviews

In the past, Microsoft has also held genuine interviews—or at least, more believable ones. Here is an interview whose subject is interviewing: "One Dev Question - What was your first interview like for Microsoft?"

You must be really bored... You were burned over a week ago, ###### sake get over it, no one cares. 🤦‍♂️

The full title of the article is "Windows 10 Enterprise vs. Windows 10 Pro: Modern management considerations for your organization".

You missed the point of the article; it's not to discuss technical differences between the SKUs. The point is how you could approach the topic of which SKU to purchase, specifically from a management perspective. I.e. how do you persuade\convince management that the cost is justified, what are the overall benefits of having the Enterprise SKU and why would you pick it over the Pro SKU, what it means to use the Enterprise SKU in the long run, etc.. It's an article providing insight from field engineers.

The people replying to the article are wearing their engineering\technical hat (the same one you're wearing). I saw your previous post, the questions you asked are difficult to answer without looking at what you've done to your system, basically... pebkac problems.

"Anyway, I reverted the entire Windows partition to the one backed up on 21 March 2020. It seems the problem went away." - Pebkac.
"I replaced my "winre.wim" file with a fresh copy from the Windows 10 20H1 ISO, provided by Microsoft. It works properly now." - Pebkac.
"The culprit was none other than... Comodo Internet Security 12.2.2. This version seems to be incompatible with Windows 10 version 20H1. As long as it was installed, any adding or changing network adaptors took a very long time." - Pebkac.

lol.

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
On 05/06/2023 at 16:37, binaryzero said:

You must be really bored... You were burned over a week ago, ###### sake get over it, no one cares. 🤦‍♂️

The full title of the article is "Windows 10 Enterprise vs. Windows 10 Pro: Modern management considerations for your organization".

You missed the point of the article; it's not to discuss technical differences between the SKUs. The point is how you could approach the topic of which SKU to purchase, specifically from a management perspective. I.e. how do you persuade\convince management that the cost is justified, what are the overall benefits of having the Enterprise SKU and why would you pick it over the Pro SKU, what it means to use the Enterprise SKU in the long run, etc.. It's an article providing insight from field engineers.

The people replying to the article are wearing their engineering\technical hat (the same one you're wearing). I saw your previous post, the questions you asked are difficult to answer without looking at what you've done to your system, basically... pebkac problems.

"Anyway, I reverted the entire Windows partition to the one backed up on 21 March 2020. It seems the problem went away." - Pebkac.
"I replaced my "winre.wim" file with a fresh copy from the Windows 10 20H1 ISO, provided by Microsoft. It works properly now." - Pebkac.
"The culprit was none other than... Comodo Internet Security 12.2.2. This version seems to be incompatible with Windows 10 version 20H1. As long as it was installed, any adding or changing network adaptors took a very long time." - Pebkac.

lol.

Well, thank you! I'm more motivated than ever to write the next part. I'm impressed. You cared enough to pull all the tricks in the book, including ridicule ("LOL" ), expressing disappointment ("🤦‍♂️"), insulting ("######"), some semblances of technical comments, and saying nobody cares. I appreciate your care. And now I have a better understanding of how Sayan Sen feels when I comment on his grammatical or technical mistakes. By the way, he's around the corner, taking his revenge. 😊

On 06/06/2023 at 09:09, lunamonkey said:

And/or is used in conversation... This isn't a smoking gun like they think. 

 

On 06/06/2023 at 09:22, Fleet Command said:

Prove it.

I know that I have used it in a conversation before...

On 06/06/2023 at 02:10, Nick H. said:

I know that I have used it in a conversation before...

Well, if you say so. And while I suspect you don't use it very often, I can concede this minor point. Nevertheless, the fake "interview" has far too many implausible points, especially compared to the more genuine-looking ones I linked. Feel free to make your conclusion.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Interesting share -- however it does not make sense: Email messages get stored somewhere, so how is Delta Chat "based on email" and decentralized without actually storing anything? By Web3 standard practices, the various Relays would require dedicated storage to make messages available to the recipients (like a large series of message queue channels, akin to racks of traditional post office boxes)... and Contacts must be two-way confirmed in order for encryption keys to be exchanged (ostensibly every key-pair is uniquely bound between sender and recipient) and the Relays would preserve the public keys in order to facilitate message carriage... or every device stores all sorts of keys and contact info. All of this to say, decentralized messaging is like running Bluesky nodes except instead of discovering/browsing public feeds by various posters (at the given node) these Delta Chats would be relaying encrypted messages (via Relays) that only trusted recipients would have the appropriate decryption key (their own private key) to read it. But this doesn't solve the "it's like email" sales pitch. The only way it's like email is that there's encrypted binary stuff being transported from your app into the federated ether of Delta Chat Relays for others to decrypt (hopefully only the intended recipient)... but outside of this federated relays framework, it is absolutely nothing like email.
    • Hasleo Backup Suite Free 5.8.2.2 by Razvan Serea Hasleo Backup Suite Free is a free Windows backup and restore software, which embeds backup, restore and cloning features, it is designed for Windows operating system users and can be used on both Windows PCs and Servers. The backup and restore feature of Hasleo Backup Suite can help you back up and restore the Windows operating systems, disks, partitions and files (folders) to protect the security of your Windows operating system and personal data. The cloning feature of Hasleo Backup Suite can help you migrate Windows to another disk, or easily upgrade a disk to an SSD or a larger capacity disk. System Backup & Restore / Disk/Partition Backup & Restore Backup Windows operating system and boot-related partitions, including user settings, drivers and applications installed in these partitions, which ensures that you can quickly restore your Windows operating system once it crashes. Viruses, power failure, or other unknown reasons may cause data loss, so it is a good habit to regularly back up the drive that stores important files, you can at least recover lost files from the backup image files in the event of a disaster. System Clone / Disk Clone / Partition Clone Migrate the Windows operating system from one disk to another SSD or larger disk without reinstalling Windows, applications and drivers. Clone entire disk to another disk and ensure that the contents of the source disk and the destination disk are exactly the same. Clone a partition completely to the specified location on the current disk or another disk and ensure that the data will not be changed. File Backup & Restore Back up specified files(folders) instead of the entire drive to another location to protect your data, so you can quickly restore files(folders) from the backup image files when needed. Incremental/Differential/Full Backup Different backup modes are supported, you can flexibly choose data protection schemes, which can improve backup performance and save storage space while ensuring data security. Delta Restore Delta restore uses advanced delta detection technology to check the changed blocks on the destination drive and restore only the changed blocks, so it has a faster restore speed than the traditional full restore. Universal Restore This feature can help us restore the Windows operating system to computers with different hardware and ensure that Windows can work normally without any hardware compatibility issues. Hasleo Backup Suite 5.8.2.2 changelog: Improved creation of bootable media that supports the UEFI CA 2023 certificate Fixed an issue that caused system restore to fail Fixed an issue where file backup could not list drives under Windows ARM64 Fixed an issue that caused backup of MacOS files/folders shared via Samba to fail Fixed an issue that caused "Smart Backup" to not work properly Fixed other minor bugs Download: Hasleo Backup Suite 5.8.2.2 | 39.7 MB (Freeware) Links: Hasleo Backup Suite Website | Hasleo Backup Suite Guide | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Shotcut 26.6.25 by Razvan Serea Shotcut is a free, open source, cross-platform video editor for Windows, Mac and Linux. Major features include support for a wide range of formats; no import required meaning native timeline editing; Blackmagic Design support for input and preview monitoring; and resolution support to 4k. Editing Features Trimming on source clip player or timeline with ripple option Append, insert, overwrite, lift, and ripple delete editing on the timeline 3-point editing Hide, mute, and lock track controls Multitrack timeline with thumbnails and waveforms Unlimited undo and redo for playlist edits including a history view Create, play, edit, save, load, encode, and stream MLT XML projects (with auto-save) Save and load trimmed clip as MLT XML file Load and play complex MLT XML file as a clip Drag-n-drop files from file manager Scrubbing and transport control Video Effects Video compositing across video tracks HTML5 (sans audio and video) as video source and filters 3-way (shadows, mids, highlights) color wheels for color correction and grading Eye dropper tool to pick neutral color for white balancing Deinterlacing Auto-rotate Fade in/out audio and fade video from and to black with easy-to-use fader controls on timeline Video wipe transitions: bar, barn door, box, clock (radial), diagonal, iris, matrix, and custom gradient image Track compositing/blending modes: Over, Add, Saturate, Multiply, Screen, Overlay, Darken, Dodge, Burn, Hard Light, Soft Light, Difference, Exclusion, HSL Hue, HSL Saturation, HSL Color, HSL Luminosity. Video Filters: Alpha Channel: Adjust, Alpha Channel: View, Blur, Brightness, Chroma Key: Advanced, Chroma Key: Simple, Contrast, Color Grading, Crop, Diffusion, Glow, Invert Colors, Key Spill: Advanced, Key Spill: Simple, Mirror, Old Film: Dust, Old Film: Grain, Old Film: Projector, Old Film: Scratches, Old Film: Technocolor, Opacity, Rotate, Rutt-Etra-Izer, Saturation, Sepia Tone, Sharpen, Size and Position, Stabilize, Text, Vignette, Wave, White Balance Speed effect for audio/video clips Hardware Support Blackmagic Design SDI and HDMI for input and preview monitoring Leap Motion for jog/shuttle control Webcam capture Audio capture to system audio card Capture (record) SDI, HDMI, webcam (V4L2), JACK audio, PulseAudio, IP stream, X11 screen, and Windows DirectShow devices Multi-core parallel image processing (when not using GPU and frame-dropping is disabled) DeckLink SDI keyer output OpenGL GPU-based image processing with 16-bit floating point linear per color component Shotcut 26.6.25 changelog highlights: Added basic support for OpenFX (OFX) video plugins. Added VST2 audio plugin support for third-party audio effects. Added Safe Mode to launch Shotcut without external plugins for easier crash recovery. Added an experimental plugin UI generator (--experimental) for supported filters and plugins. Added a new Noise Reduction audio filter powered by RNNoise. Added HDR export support. Added PQ HDR metadata options for HDR exports. Added the ability to view HDR previews in full-screen mode. Improved Vulkan display support on Linux. Fixed DeckLink and UltraStudio external monitor deadlocks. Fixed Opus audio export warnings related to frame_duration. Improved plugin discovery and compatibility for supported OpenFX and VST2 plugins. Expanded command-line options for testing experimental features. Improved overall application stability when using third-party plugins. Enhanced HDR editing and preview workflow. Included numerous bug fixes, performance optimizations, and general stability improvements throughout the application.[full release notes] Download: Shotcut 26.6.25 | Portable | ARM64 ~200.0 MB (Open Source) View: Shotcut Home Page | Other Operating Systems | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • I looked into a few echo devices to find they were riddled with adverts over time. No thanks ill stick to my homeassistant, smart plugs, smart bulbs and cameras that don't cost me a monthly fee and are cheaper to buy. No adverts also.
    • Brave Browser 1.91.180 is out.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Woland13 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Woland13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      bernmeister earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      tuben earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      504
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      229
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      163
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      76
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!