It is worth noting, Linux users can already use Microsoft Teams through the web version. However, Windows Central found a thread on the Microsoft Teams UserVoice page where engineer Alex hinted at expansion to Linux. While not speaking about Microsoft’s desire to bring Teams to more platforms and Linux specifically, he said “stay tuned for more information soon”. It’s important to know the thread was originally created in 2016, but Alex’s response was published last month. How close Microsoft is to creating a Teams app on Linux remains to be seen. Slack, Microsoft’s chief competitor in this market, already has a Linux app available to its users.

$ sudo apt-key adv –keyserver https://t.co/wSQl0svQ9T –recv-keys EB3E94ADBE1229CF$ sudo sh -c ’echo “deb https://t.co/byJ6y2vUXa stable main” > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/teams.list’$ sudo apt-get update BUT there’s nothing in the repo yet. — Hayden Barnes (@unixterminal) August 6, 2019 Through its Skype enterprise service, Microsoft has a dominant position in the workplace chat market. Creating a native app experience for as many platforms as possible will allow Microsoft to stay ahead of Slack.

Competition

As we reported in July, Microsoft Teams is besting main rival Slack in terms of adoption rates and usage. New data presented by market research firm ETR shows Microsoft Teams is leading Slack in market use and growing faster. Slack clearly sees Teams as a threat, but the company’s CEO attempted to cool Slack’s obvious unease by saying Teams is not a threat and could even be compared to Google+ and Bing.

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