Nadella, where is your 'New Microsoft"?
Because this stinks of the same old shit that gave MS the reputation it has today.
Microsoft is terminating its SharePoint Online Public Website service, effective January 2015. SharePoint Online Public Website lets Office 365 users create a website and customise it with in-browser tools. In an advisory posted on Friday, Microsoft explains that “As part of the evolution of the Office 365 service, we …
Sharepoint is a total mess. Well in the three places where I have worked and been forced to use it, it has been.
For example,
I inserted a document and sent out the access URL to colleagues all over the world.
The Sharepoint spotty faced admin decided to re-org things. The URL no longer worked. It took me three hours of searching to find it again.
We now refer to Sharepoint as the place where docs go to die and get forgotten.
It is no wonder that the PHB's are sending out memos asking why the login counts to their expensive POS have dropped by 70% in the last year. Sorta like that team blogging thingy that they bought, installed, demanded that everyone use it and resorted to sending out edicts via that just to get the usage count up. Only one person I know uses it. The get the edicts and sends them out by email to those who might be interested. YAUMP (Yet Another Useless Microsoft Product)
+100. The last company I was hell bent on deploying it, and I was pretty skeptical, particularly as my other sysadmin buddies at other companies were emphatic about NOT deploying it. I sent those reservations upstream but to no avail. I had no personal exposure before that deployment to bring to bear and stop it... Long story short - my exposure to Sharepoint 2010 and 2013 was enough to have me make sure any company I'm working for DOESN'T have Sharepoint. I never want to see that steaming pile ever again. Ironically MS apparently feels the same way by pulling it from o365. :)
> Has anyone ever encountered a working and productive SharePoint install? Because I never have.
While I'm sure there *MUST* be one that exists based on what consultants that came in to fix the last installation said, what I've actually seen so far would indicate you'd have better luck finding the Loch Ness Monster or Sasquatch. Too many people in the "click next, next, next, finish" crowd handling the design work and installations.
(and no, the consultants didn't fix it per se, although they did get it actually performing better.)
Redmond's not naming who will offer those solutions, but says all will be revealed in January 2015 and that Office 365 customers will be offered generous pricing.
They also don't tell how much these 3rd parties have to pay to get on the list. I'd bet it's not for free, by a long shot.
For existing customers that already use it, they can continue and for those that don't use it, they are not losing anything.
On the other hand Microsoft are offering new features and benefits as well in Q1, inlcuding unlimited storage on Office 365 Business and Home variants.
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Or enough time for Google Sites to go the way of Google Reader...!
On a serious note, I don't think Microsoft would be binning this feature if there were masses of users of it. We're one of the users of it and we'd already started our migration process away from it because it's basically Frontpage in the browser!
"Bootnote: An explanation for the image. It's Cher, pointing. You'll figure it out.
Seems relevant to me..."
I did figure it out, as soon as I saw the picture at the top of the article, long before I reached the bootnote.
But explaining it in the bootnote doesn't make it relevant. It just explains the pun.
This concept of "delivering the utmost value to customers" and "delivering a superior productivity experience" sounds pretty much like Bubba with a jar of petroleum jelly in his hand, hovering over his new cellmate. As the prison surgeon later said, "Be grateful he used the lube ... !"
Microsoft, you routinely set amazing new standards of customer relations couched in terms of totally incredible non-speak. Where do you find these butchers of the English language ... dredged up from the deepest catacombs of Redmond-Under-the-Sound?
"...sounds pretty much like Bubba with a jar of petroleum jelly in his hand..."
Visualised perfectly in a scene from an episode of "The Comic Strip" in the early 90s. Terrorised inmate (Rik Mayall I think) cowers in the corner of his cell as a large, aggressive hairy chap covered in bondage straps and a leather jockstrap advances menacingly with outstretched arms, delivering in an East End accent the immortal line "one day you're going to thank me for this."
If you want the Gold Standard in impenetrable, meaningless bollocks, try reading Symantecs product page for the PGP suite. If you can work out what differs between versions or how much its actually going to cost you, you probably should see a psychiatrist; bonus points if you take less than 10 minutes to find the Mac version.
This winter's task was to get my head round the Sharepoint(less) website stuff that comes with my Office 365 subscription. As far as I can tell, the thing is built round a limited number of templates which don't provide much customisation, providing, me at least, a very frustrating experience when used to editing html and css in notepad++. So, no great loss then. But what will be provided instead - nothing?
""This winter's task was to get my head round the Sharepoint(less) website stuff that comes with my Office 365 subscription.""
The entire Office 365 is very curious, the web part of it is so simple and devoid of functionality that I wonder why do they even bother, it is so simple that I find confusing how to use it!
The bits that do the work, essentially Word/Excel/Outlook are the same as ever, but with a coat of crap interface.
Is a product that shines if you have SharePoint developers in house to essentially turn it into something non-generic.
I have seen lots of companies that invested a ton of money on it, to finaly end losing the people who maintain it, thus letting it rot big time.
And at the same time depend on it enough to grant investing a little fortune into getting the latest version plus a couple of contractors to import all the old stuff into the new version, where it will rot until the time the next version comes around.
The endless Microsoft circle of life (for Microsoft) in which no competing product is ever even considered, because the company has too much dependence in <introduce product name here in this case SharePoint>.
SharePoint is a tar-pit platform.