Or rather one guy couldn’t get outlook working on his personal device. It wasn’t anything for the mission. The fact that they had someone give tech support to someone in space for a personal device on a 10 day trip or whatever it is seems crazy to me altogether. Tell the guy to go to webmail and if he can’t sign in, have his spouse reset the credentials here on earth or wait until you come back.
so like, it’s 10 days yeah but this is a space trip. they have room for personal devices? that is news to me. first question i want the answer to is What is the wifi password in space
No one’s outlook works.
Or rather one guy couldn’t get outlook working on his personal device. It wasn’t anything for the mission. The fact that they had someone give tech support to someone in space for a personal device on a 10 day trip or whatever it is seems crazy to me altogether. Tell the guy to go to webmail and if he can’t sign in, have his spouse reset the credentials here on earth or wait until you come back.
so like, it’s 10 days yeah but this is a space trip. they have room for personal devices? that is news to me. first question i want the answer to is What is the wifi password in space
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Why do you need a WiFi password in space? No one else is around, lol
You think no one else is around, and suddenly you get an unauthorized device on the network you have to explain to Houston. No thanks.
The mission leader. Not some rando walking around the Artemis.
Why would they load two copies on his CPD?
Not exactly the NASA of old. He probably had a lag with OneDrive, so fuck MicroSlop.
I technically have two Outlook installs on my work PC. Outlook classic and Outlook new.
@SaveTheTuaHawk @LifeInMultipleChoice if I were a billion dollar corporation I would pay stacks to have my product used there