Posts Tagged ‘ General Information ’

Office Suite 2010 Beta Released on TechNet (with links to the downloads)

For those of you with a TechNet subscription and an itching desire to download the Office 2010 Suite of products, they are now here!! I’m sure every other blogger is writing this same post so I won’t make it long.  The RSS feed for the released products is here: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/subscriptions/subscription-downloads.rss if you want direct links to the downloads, here they are:

Office Search Server Express 2010 Beta (x64)

Office SharePoint Foundation Server 2010 Beta (x64)

Office Visio Premium 2010 Beta (x64)

Office Visio Premium 2010 Beta (x86)

FAST Search Server SharePoint 2010 Beta (x64)

Office Project Server 2010 Beta (x64)

Office Project Professional 2010 Beta (x64)

Office Project Professional 2010 Beta (x86)

Office Professional Plus 2010 Beta (x64)

Office Professional Plus 2010 Beta (x86)

Office SharePoint Designer 2010 Beta (x86 and x64)

Office SharePoint Server 2010 Beta (x64)

Office SharePoint Foundation Server 2010 Beta (x64)

Office Business Contact Manager 2010 Beta (x64)

Office Web Applications 2010 Beta (x64)

That is everything I currently see on TechNet.  They are all English versions and please, no one comment and tell me I have the wrong names.  I realize the names above don’t all match up to the new names that Microsoft announced when it comes to SharePoint.  I just copied the names directly from the TechNet site.

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Introduction to SharePoint 2010 Online

In the wake of our coverage of last month's SharePoint Conference sessions, this is the eleventh in a series of posts documenting the keynotes and sessions I attended at the Microsoft "Airlift" event for Office 2010.  This four-day event took place in Seattle during the first week of June, was open to participants in Microsoft's Technical Adoption Program (TAP), and in essence took the form of a mini-SharePoint Conference.

Jason Cahill and David Gorbet presented the session on SharePoint 2010 Online, in which they provided an overview, a discussion of features, and a demo of the offerings.  Microsoft's managed service went international in March of this year, and is available in Standard or Dedicated versions.  The Standard version is represented by multiple customers sharing a single architecture, with Dedicated being a single customer per architecture (typically businesses of over 5,000 seats).  WSS and MOSS are available, and though several MOSS features are not available in the hosted environment today, "the idea with 2010 is to make the 'not available' list as small as possible."

Features listed, including some functionality that's specific to SharePoint Online, include:

  • Easy / customizable SharePoint experiences to minimize time-to-value
  • Extranet allows users to easily collaborate outside the org
  • Internet allows for easy creation of anonymously accessible sites
  • SSO (Single Sign-On) and federation with on premises AD (Active Directory)
  • Coexistence with on premises data sources
  • Increased dev extensibility and Azure integration
  • International support

There will be a four sites business model with 2010, including Portal, Standard, Enterprise, and Anonymous.  Anonymous sites are synonymous with Internet-facing in this model and, it was noted, "may be sold separately."

Supported browsers for SharePoint Online include IE versions 7 and 8, and Firefox version 3, all of which are being fully tested.

During the demo it was mentioned that 250 megs per user is the quota (with an option to buy more), and that the plan is for quarterly updates with continual, feedback-driven feature enhancements.  The intent is that the SharePoint Online 2010 will launch in conjunction with "the DVD product."

As a postscript, I should mention that third-party code such as Bamboo Web Parts currently runs in the Dedicated model, but is not supported in the multi-tenant Standard model at present.  We are working closely with Microsoft in this area and expect changes in 2010.

Read our complete coverage of the Office 2010 Airlift sessions:

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Multilingual Translator for SharePoint, SharePoint Online

alphaMosaik_logo_2009.jpg A great way to finish up my Friday. Taking a look at a third party SharePoint Multilingual Module. This one comes from a Quebec based company called AlphaMosaik.

Now we know that SharePoint 2007 offers us multilingual capabilities in the form of Variations, but this module goes farther, offering more languages and more functionality.

Read full story…

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Microsoft Unveils SharePoint Server 2010 and Showcases New Functionality

On Oct 19, 2009 at Microsoft Corp.’s SharePoint Conference, Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer announced that the public beta of Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft Office 2010 will become available in November, and revealed some of the new SharePoint Server 2010 capabilities for the first time.
“By taming the overflow of information across systems and technologies, SharePoint enables organizations to thrive,” Ballmer said. “SharePoint 2010 is the biggest and most important release of SharePoint to date. When paired with Microsoft Office 2010, SharePoint 2010 will transform efficiency by connecting workers across a single collaboration platform for business.”


SharePoint Server is one of the fastest-growing products in Microsoft’s history, with over $1.3 billion in revenue, representing over a 20 percent growth over the past year. According to IDC, Microsoft attained a significant share of the collaborative content workspace market in 2008, and had the highest growth rate among top vendors with its Microsoft Office SharePoint Server.


During his keynote address, Ballmer talked broadly about SharePoint Server as a business collaboration platform and highlighted three key areas. One was how organizations can respond quickly to business needs with an improved developer platform that makes it easier to build rich content and collaboration applications. Another topic was the enhanced Internet site capabilities that help businesses drive revenue and retain customers on a single platform. The third was the choice and flexibility between on-premises and cloud solutions. At the event, Microsoft showcased the breadth of SharePoint Server 2010 that ranges from wikis to workflows, while Ballmer’s keynote address highlighted features and capabilities such as these:



  • A new ribbon user interface that makes end users more productive and customization of SharePoint sites easy.

  • Deep Office integration through social tagging, backstage integration and document life-cycle management.

  • Built-in support for rich media such as video, audio and Silverlight, making it easy to build dynamic Web sites.

  • New Web content management features with built-in accessibility through Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0, multilingual support and one-click page layout, enabling anyone to access SharePoint Server sites.

  • New SharePoint tools in Microsoft Visual Studio 2010, giving developers a premier experience with the tools they know and trust.

  • Business Connectivity Services, which allow developers to connect capabilities to line-of-business data or Web services in SharePoint Server and the Office client.

  • Rich APIs and support for Silverlight, representational state transfer (REST) and Language-Integrated Query (LINQ), to help developers rapidly build applications on the SharePoint platform .

  • Enterprise features in SharePoint Online such as Excel Services and InfoPath Forms Services, which make it simple to use, share, secure and manage interactive forms across an organization.

  • The addition of two new SharePoint SKUs for Internet-facing sites, including an on-premises and hosted offer
     

“In today’s economy, controlling costs and expenses is essential,” said David Glenn, director of Enterprise Operations at Del Monte Foods Co. “However, we still have the requirement to make sure our employees, customers and partners can get the information they need to be productive, no matter where they are. SharePoint 2010 is going to allow us to do that more effectively.”


Microsoft SharePoint 2010 is part of the next wave of Microsoft Office-related products, which includes Microsoft Office 2010, Microsoft Project 2010, Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 and Microsoft Visio 2010, that are designed to give people the best productivity experience across PCs, phones and browsers.


Availability


The public betas of Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010, Office 2010, Project 2010 and Visio 2010 will become available in November 2009; more information is available at http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9689707.


Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 will be available in the first half of 2010. More information about Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 can be found at http://www.microsoft.com/sharepoint.


This information is about pre-release software and therefore is subject to change. It is provided without warranty of any kind, express or implied.

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Microsoft’s Public SharePoint 2010 Site … Now Running on SharePoint 2010!

SharePoint 2010 site…now running on SharePoint 2010 Beta 1″>Microsoft's public <a href=SharePoint 2010 site…now running on SharePoint 2010 Beta 1″ border=”0″ style=”border:0;float:left;margin-left:8px;margin-right:8px;margin-top:2px;margin-bottom:2px;” />Yep, it's true: The public SharePoint 2010 site now runs on SharePoint 2010 Beta 1, so if you'd like to get a sense of the 2010 look and feel from an actual live site rather than just from screenshots or video demos, sharepoint2010.microsoft.com is there for you.

This is the same site that launched in conjunction with the Worldwide Partner Conference back in July and, in addition to its now running on SharePoint 2010 Beta 1, the content offerings have been greatly expanded.  Included on the site now are: a video summary from Tom Rizzo of the SharePoint Conference keynotes; a Capabilities area, with features on Sites, Communities, Content, Search, Insights, and Composites; an expanded library with 11 new video demos covering each of the aforementioned Capabilities, new offerings for IT Pros and Developers, and more; an overview of SharePoint 2010 Editions; and Related Technologies (currently featuring SharePoint Foundation 2010 and SharePoint Designer 2010).

While you're on the site checking out all of the new features and ogling the look and feel, don't forget to pre-register for the SharePoint 2010 public Beta, which will be available in November.

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