The Verge | Cloud computing company Salesforce is joining other Silicon Valley tech giants in announcing a substantial shift in how it allows its employees to work. In a blog post published Tuesday, the company says the “9-to-5 workday is dead” and that it will allow employees to choose one of three categories that dictate how often, if ever, they return to the office once it’s safe to do so.
Innova Solutions | Join our friend Robert Toups, Senior Cloud Architect at Innova Solutions, for a live webinar on February 25th! He'll share how SaaSOps empowers IT pros like him to control SaaS operating costs and secure a cloud-based environment.
Neowin | Microsoft is set to introduce a new service plan for commercial Teams users called ‘Teams Pro’ that adds capabilities for those who want to use the collaboration tool for webinars. The company announced the introduction of the plan on the Microsoft 365 Message Center (as spotted by Petri), which is expected to roll out starting mid-March at the tenant level.
Infosecurity | A researcher claims to have hacked into the internal systems of major companies including Apple and Microsoft using a novel supply chain attack. Alex Biran created malicious node packages and uploaded them to the npm registry under unclaimed names. The node packages collected information through their preinstall script about the machines upon which they were installed.
Macworld | iCloud is a convenient hub for syncing a large array of personal data, some of it secret—like passwords. But if you lose or sell a device or it’s stolen, you can wind up potentially exposing your information in large and small ways. But even if you can’t get access to the device, you can sever its connection to your iCloud account, which can reduce some of the impact.
How-To Geek | Removing a distracting background from an image allows your audience to focus on the subject matter. Though it’s not known for its image editing suite, you can do this using Microsoft Excel. Here’s how it’s done.
SaaSOps Community | As I read our series of SaaSOps Stories with IT leaders, one trend stood out to me: Chromebooks are the future—well, at least if it's up to IT. Check out how the community feels about zero-touch enrollment enabled Chromebooks by clicking the link above.
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