Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Microsoft makes tweaks to Xbox Live and Teams to handle spike in demand

Add as a preferred source on Google

Microsoft is adjusting its cloud services to manage the huge surge in demand caused by the pandemic of coronavirus, officially called COVID-19. Microsoft Azure, the company’s cloud computing service, has been under tremendous strain in the last few weeks as people all over the globe switch to remote work and turn to gaming for entertainment at home.

Last week, Microsoft announced it would be monitoring performance and usage trends to anticipate increased demand for its services, and set out criteria for deciding what services should be a top priority (for example, that first responders, medical supply management, and emergency applications be prioritized).

Recommended Videos

This week, the company has released the first results of the monitoring of usage, and unsurprisingly, there’s been a massive spike. “We have seen a 775% increase of our cloud services in regions that have enforced social distancing or shelter in place orders,” Microsoft shared in a blog post. In addition, “We have seen a very significant spike in Teams usage and now have more than 44 million daily users. Those users generated over 900 million meeting and calling minutes on Teams daily in a single week.” The company also shared that the use of Windows Virtual Desktop has grown by more than three times.

To manage this demand, Microsoft is making some small changes to some of its services including Xbox Live. “To streamline moderation and ensure the best experience for our community, we’re making small adjustments,” an Xbox support notification highlighted by The Verge reads. “We’ve temporarily turned off the ability to upload custom gamerpics, club pics, and club backgrounds.” Microsoft has also said that it is taking “proactive steps” to prepare for periods of high usage and by pushing bandwidth-heavy actions like game updates into off-peak hours.

The Teams service will be tweaked as well. “We made a few temporary adjustments to select non-essential capabilities such as how often we check for user presence, the interval in which we show when the other party is typing, and video resolution,” the blog post said. “These adjustments do not have significant impact on our end users’ daily experiences.”

These small changes shouldn’t make much of an impact on users, but they will hopefully allow Azure services to remain active to meet all of the increased demand they face.

Update 04/01/2020: Microsoft has clarified that the 775% increase in service use was in Teams calling in Italy specifically, where a shelter in place order has been enforced.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
The size of a credit card: This fully functional computer even packs an e-ink screen
This credit card-sized computer packs Wi-Fi, NFC, and an e ink display
Muxcard

A developer has built a remarkably thin computer that is almost the same size and thickness as a standard credit card, potentially opening the door to a new category of ultra-portable computing devices.

Called the “Muxcard,” the experimental device combines a fully functional microcomputer, wireless connectivity, NFC support, sensors, and an E Ink display into a body measuring just 1mm thick - thin enough to fit inside a regular wallet alongside bank cards. The project, created by GitHub user “krauseler,” has quickly drawn attention from the maker and hardware enthusiast community for pushing the physical limits of compact electronics.

Read more
If your router or drone maker is banned in the US, it will get an update lifeline until 2029
Your “banned” router isn’t dead yet, says the FCC
Drone

The Federal Communications Commission has extended a key waiver allowing certain foreign-made routers, drones, and drone components to continue receiving software and firmware updates in the United States until at least January 1, 2029.

The move comes after growing concerns that millions of already-deployed devices could become cybersecurity risks if manufacturers were suddenly blocked from issuing security patches and compatibility updates. The decision was announced through the FCC’s Office of Engineering and Technology (OET), which also expanded the scope of the waiver to cover additional software-related changes needed to maintain device functionality.

Read more
AI-pilled graduates are not a big hit for finance jobs with their shallow ideas
Turns out ChatGPT can’t survive every finance interview
Artificial Intelligence

Artificial intelligence may be transforming the financial industry, but some firms are beginning to push back against a growing trend: graduates who rely too heavily on AI tools without demonstrating deeper analytical thinking.

According to a report by The Financial Times, the issue recently surfaced through experiences shared by senior finance professionals, including one New York financier who described his company’s 2025 interns as the first group of “true AI natives.” These students had grown up using both digital platforms and generative AI systems, and initially appeared highly capable during recruitment.

Read more