Forum Discussion
Cuatdrak
Oct 15, 2021Copper Contributor
Muting myself for a reason
Many of us work from home now and so, we're quite often having to do meetings and things like that. I don't work from home, usually, but sometimes I do. Like today, for instance. Unfortunately, my...
EWoodrick
Oct 16, 2021Iron Contributor
Maybe you should try the Teams shortcut instead. Ctrl+Shift +M.
Or even better get a Teams certified device that has a mute button
Or even better get a Teams certified device that has a mute button
- CuatdrakOct 16, 2021Copper Contributor
EWoodrick I already have a mute system on my computer. I do not expect it to be overrode. It would be like coming home to find out the nanny enrolled the kids into a different school district. Why was my decision overrode by something that thinks it knows better but has no idea of what variables there are? That is why we have the human factor. Humans have the ability to see new unforeseen variables and react to them. Software can only see the variables that the engineers happened to think of. They'll never get them all. Humans make the final decisions and they're not to be overrode by software and its engineers, even if the engineers think they're Nostradamus and can foresee all potential variables.
I'm guessing they don't teach this in business administration or any kind of computer science schools. They shouldn't have to.
- StevenC365Oct 17, 2021MVP
Cuatdrak Does Fn-F1 mute the microphone in any application? On my Dell laptop that will silence the speaker, it does nothing to the mic.
- CuatdrakOct 18, 2021Copper ContributorYou are right. I meant F5 or whatever it is. I was on my desktop when I wrote this. My laptop is different but it was definitely the mic that was muted. The button shows a mic inside of a slashed circle and lights up when it's muted. Part of the problem is, it will actually mute when you use the function keys but only stays that way for a few seconds until Teams unmutes it, so it's easy to believe that you have effectively muted yourself.