SharePoint 2010 Revealed

At its SharePoint Conference 2009 today in Las Vegas, Microsoft revealed details about the next version of its SharePoint platform.

"By taming the overflow of information across systems and technologies, SharePoint enables organizations to thrive," Microsoft CEO Steve 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

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.

Discuss this Article 13

Logjamming
on Oct 19, 2009
But honestly: 90% of the features haven't been changed since Office 97. We're just saying this so we can stuff another useless piece of software down your throat. And if you don't buy it, we'll make sure documents created with Office 2010 won't work with previous versions. This is how we at Microsoft value our customers. Loyal sheeps who need to pay up so we can buy up companies and pay off EU monopoly lawsuits. Oh, Microsoft. The dying dinosaur of the software industry.
EricoF3
on Oct 19, 2009
@Logjamming: Stupid comment...
planetarian
on Oct 19, 2009
cute troll. i think i have a cousin that used to collect those...
EricoF3
on Oct 19, 2009
Logjamming said: "Oh, Microsoft. The dying dinosaur of the software industry." Dying dinosaur!!?? The only software company that really devoloppe a modern operating system... Apple is a dinosaur by using a 70s OS Kernel to run their User Shell (OSX)... All company that actually use Linux and Unix Kernel in their new products and try to let try peoples it do modern software are dinosaurs...
mikegalos@msn.com
on Oct 19, 2009
Just to correct the troll so anyone gullible enough to think he has a clue isn't confused... Office 2010 files work fine with Office 2007 and 2008 and work on earlier versions with the proper free update for the older versions that allows them to read and write the new XML/Standards based file formats. I've been using Office 2010 for a while now and regularly share documents with people not on the beta including editing documents on my old Windows Mobile phone.
EricoF3
on Oct 19, 2009
God!!! Why we always had coments from Apple Trolls??? Is Windows Trolls do the same on Apple Fans blogs too???
Waethorn
on Oct 19, 2009
"Why we always had coments from Apple Trolls???" Because they have a Mac, and have nothing better to do with it.
Backup77
on Oct 19, 2009
@Mike Thanks for a bit of clarity there. I am looking forward to the public beta of Office 2010 next month.
anonymous
on Oct 19, 2009
Microsoft Application Architecture Guide 2ª ed. : Nueva versión de esta excelente guía para estructurar
gadfly10
on Oct 19, 2009
We implemented Sharepoint back in 2003 with Microsoft pledging their support as we tested it. They promised more document management and pledged their support. We bought, they bailed. We just ripped it out this year. Search was pathetic (better off buying a third party solution like Coveo) and the overall performance was painfully slow. Cripes, you needed a separate server for every frick'n task. Backup and restore was rudimentary at best, --and you need to buy a separate anti-virus solution! Not worth the money.
whiplash55
on Oct 19, 2009
@Eric Next thing your going to tell us is Apple still uses a file system from the early 80s. Oh never mind.
anonymous
on Oct 19, 2009
This post was mentioned on Twitter by EverythingMS: SharePoint 2010 Revealed http://bit.ly/18tWHv
gadfly10
on Oct 20, 2009
The Sharepoint 2007 built-in Wiki is terrible. Don't even bother.

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