This is very strangely phrased, both in the title, and in the article body:<p><i>"Guthrie allegedly warned staff during the meeting that Microsoft won’t return to working in the office five days a week unless it notices a lag in productivity."</i><p>This feels less like a warning and more like an ... appeal?<p>If you like this, help make sure it works.
I would be for the employees returning to office, if they could make Windows UI flexible and customizable.<p>After all, there is at least some minimal efforts to modernize the Win11 UI: it seems not impossible (after many years of trying) to make taskbar icons small, or align the taskbar icons to the left.
Return to our offices or else!<p>How about -> 'No.'<p>How about we get with reality and realize that spending ~$5 a gallon to sit in traffic, wait at red lights, waste time office chatting/gossiping/putting up with politics/drama/and countless 'meetings' that we can..<p>1. Wake up.<p>2. Get ready for the day.<p>3. Sit down at our computer.<p>4. Log on.<p>5. Work. Apply ourselves.<p>Achieve more as a lot of the day ends up with waiting on others, so this balances the work/homelife even greater... which in return..<p>Makes better employees and contractors!<p>Who knew, saying this for when I was in a position as an executive myself.<p>Working next to people on projects closely is very good, but, how often does that happen that a voice channel with push-to-talk and screen share doesn't do the same thing?