Advertisement
Promo

Office applications Toolkit

SharePoint and Office betas to arrive soon

Mary Branscombe and Simon Bisson ZDNet UK

Published: 20 Oct 2009 08:38 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Microsoft will release public betas of SharePoint 2010 and Office 2010 in November, chief executive Steve Ballmer announced on Monday.

The Office test versions will cover the entire Office 2010 client suite, as well as the Office Web Apps companion software, he added, speaking at the company's SharePoint conference in Las Vegas.

The final versions of both SharePoint 2010 document-management platform and Office 2010 will be available in the first half of next year, Ballmer said in his keynote, where he referred to SharePoint as one of his favourite products.

SharePoint 2010 is the platform that powers on-premises versions of the Office 2010 web applications, which are intended for viewing and editing Office documents from inside document libraries rather than as replacements for the client applications.

Jeff Teper, senior vice president of the Office Business Platform, joined Ballmer on stage to outline what to expect from SharePoint.

"We're working hard on the beta," Teper told the audience. "We think it's basically done, but we want to do one big thing before we release it."

Some 5,000 users inside Microsoft have been testing the new version, and last week it was rolled out to 1,000 employees, Teper said, adding that the SharePoint team wants to monitor the larger deployment before releasing the code publicly.

Teper confirmed that SharePoint 2010 will be 64-bit only. That will allow it to support much larger document libraries: up to tens of millions of items in document libraries and hundreds of millions of documents in archives.

With such large document libraries, "you do not want to use the folder metaphor — this needs a new user interface", Teper pointed out. SharePoint 2010 adds more metadata for organisation, supporting enterprise taxonomies as well as end-user document tagging. Users can also group related documents into a logical document set and apply workflow and metadata to the whole set of documents.

Like the rest of the Office 2010 family, SharePoint will have the Office Ribbon user interface and contextual tabs. It is integrated into the Office 2010 apps, so users can edit documents from a library offline, see tags and other document metadata and can check documents in and out of the Backstage menu.

Microsoft intends to expand the reach of SharePoint, and Office 2010 will include the recently rechristened Groove — now known as SharePoint Workspace 2010 — which will allow offline working and content synchronisation.

Both SharePoint sites and Office Web App documents support multiple browsers, including Safari on the Mac and smartphone browsers for mobile access. Ballmer promised improved Mac support, following on from the SharePoint Companion for Mac, included in the Mac Office SP2 release.

 However, the support will not be comprehensive, he warned. "There will be some things that undoubtedly only work on the PC; I have got to be blunt on that," he said.

Other improvements were promised for SharePoint's built-in development tools and for its integration with Office. The platform software will have the ability to quickly link data sources to Office, SharePoint senior director Tom Rizzo said, as he demonstrated a two-way connection between a SQL database and Outlook contacts.

Another key announcement was the unveiling of PowerPivot for both Excel and SharePoint, which will be available at "roughly the same time as SharePoint and Office 2010", according to Teper. Code-named Gemini, PowerPivot is an in-memory database that runs on both server and client, speeding up working with large amounts of data. Users will be able to work with over 100 million rows, filtering in near real time rather than waiting for SQL Server to process a query and generate a report.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
7 out of 7 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:






Video icon

Video

Discussions

CA CA

Beware of keeping your head in the clo...

Friday 11 December 2009, 12:53 AM

1 comment
CA CA

UK internet hit by LINX router failure

Friday 11 December 2009, 12:30 AM

1 comment
CA CA

McKinnon lawyers seek judicial review

Friday 11 December 2009, 12:27 AM

1 comment
CA CA

Thats...

Thursday 10 December 2009, 11:11 PM

1 comment

Vista Upgrade Blog

Tinsel on the TARDIS

There were shepherds on the hill, and the Doctor popped his head out of the TARDIS and said "you might want to see this" and they were astounded. WHY do we pay for a TV licence?... More

Post a comment

Can I have fries with that? (Consumer...

Licence policies of Tech company's have been for a long time both complicated and 'Dick Turpin-esque', people just click 'I agree' without reading the Agreement. I do the same, but... More

1 comment

This Crap Site

How utterly stupid - I am ranked #40 in the top 100 - as a member of this site..... I mean HOW utterly stupid.... I have done sweet FA, I have only rejoined this site after a 3 or... More

2 comments


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters