This week, the big event of the year is happening in the SharePoint space. SharePoint Conference in Las Vegas. During a couple of days from May 21 to May 23, Microsoft and some world-class speakers are announcing exciting news and features that are happening in the SharePoint space.
This blog post aims to give a recap of the most interesting announcements and features we’ve learnt about so far.
First off – the introductory stats about SharePoint is pretty incredible. I remember back in 2006 when I started my journey in the SharePoint landscape. A LOT has happened since!
Wow! #SharePoint is used by 400 000 organizations and 70% of them are in the #Office365 cloud! #microsoft365 – WOW! pic.twitter.com/X2sMhlc5E1
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
Compare this to when BPOS launched its first preview about 9 years ago 😉
https://twitter.com/zimmergren/status/974383219939467264
Anyway, here’s some of the recent announcements I really liked from the first day of the conference along with some of my thoughts.
I am fairly certain that anyone working with lists and libraries on a daily basis will find these announcements very welcome. List creation is getting a major update, and allows for a more powerfull and easy list creation process.
#SharePoint is getting a revamped list creation experience. It’s a new, pretty slick UX. More power to SharePoint lists. Right?#Microsoft365 #Office365 pic.twitter.com/gAWZRNZIPE
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
One of the things that was announced is the simplicity and ease of which you can now copy rows from an Excel-sheet directly into a SharePoint list. Good bye old datasheet views, welcome native support for copy-paste from Excel.
I don’t think I have to explain how much we’ve wanted to see this capability come true, and become easier than ever before. Well done Microsoft. Now let’s hope it’s as good in action as it is in the demo.
Okay THIS is REALLY useful. I needed it 7 years ago, but now it’s here! Copy and paste from #Excel into a #SharePoint list, natively. #Microsoft365 #Office365 announced by @cmcnulty2000 at #SPC18 pic.twitter.com/GScCbYayOE
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
As Maarten pointed out, Lists will also come with other new capabilities like row formatting to easier make your lists render the data as you want them to.
Cool! Row formatting coming to #SharePoint lists soon! #SPC18 pic.twitter.com/6oj9uhsaci
— Maarten Eekels (@maarteneekels) May 21, 2018
Dan Holme announced that SharePoint will get tagging of pages with metadata. It does indeed look pretty slick and simple.
#SharePoint gets tagging of pages with metadata! #Microsoft365 #Office365 as heard by @danholme at #SPC18 pic.twitter.com/oRkaBhcajt
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
The #SharePoint mobile app is getting some big updates. Simplified, revamped and easier. #Office365 #Microsoft365 pic.twitter.com/2gozyBYtJv
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
File activity, usage tracking, stats for files and items.#Microsoft365 #Office365 #SharePoint and #OneDrive is getting a really hot list of improvements. Announced at #SPC18 by @aaronlrimmer pic.twitter.com/2JdpP6outR
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
One pretty interesting feature is the new image analysis. Images uploaded into Microsoft 365 will automatically be scanned (and possibly recognized).
This is very welcome news. The Admin Center for SharePoint Online has for a long time been pretty bad. Really bad, in many ways. With the recent announcements for an improved admin center (which we’ve been able to test a bit already), they also announced a -very- welcome addition: Better Site Management!
The #SharePoint Admin center is getting a revamped experience. Not a day too late if you ask me. Great to see this improvement. For example, here’s the site management (a LOT of improvements vs. old)#Microsoft365 #Office365 #SPC18 pic.twitter.com/Vwh02dkmGJ
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
Creating engaging pages using connected web parts and extensions. This is what the messaging was for some new improvements in the extensibility model of SharePoint. I’m really excited about seeing this in action, and to see this come full-circle. Developers today can leverage many technologies, and the easier it becomes to integrate with data and services in the Azure stack, the lower the bar becomes for new developers to embrace these new workloads. This is good news.
Coming soon in #SharePoint, announced by @vesajuvonen at #SPC18: Dynamic Data and #Azure connected Web Parts and Extensions. #Microsoft365 #Office365 bring on the modern world! pic.twitter.com/j0d4wTODbG
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
When you join a site to a hub site, it by default inherits the theme of the hub site. With the recent announcements, new capabilities will offer Site Scripting methods to help with things like:
Associate a site with a Hub easily. Also, add scripts to run when you join a hub site! Yay for more customization scenarios! #SharePoint #Office365 #microsoft365 as heard on #SPC18 pic.twitter.com/dU1ncxUQUn
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
See the link section at the end of this post for references and more information.
SharePoint Spaces was announced. I guess my only comment on this right now is to see where the train goes.
So, #SharePointSpaces. For everyone (?), powered by AI and extensible. #SharePoint #Microsoft365 #Office365 pic.twitter.com/f4QCPm4s2u
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
Microsoft announced that SharePoint Server 2019 will hit GA by fall 2018. Exciting news for anyone who is still running their SharePoint deployments in-house and on-premises.
#SharePoint Server 2019 is coming as a preview this summer, and aim to release by this fall. #OneDrive files on demand, Modern Sites, Communication sites, improved hybrid scenarios. #Office365 #microsoft365 #SPC18 @jeffteper says they advocate cloud first, but support on-prem! pic.twitter.com/iasbYmNYPs
— Tobias Zimmergren (@zimmergren) May 21, 2018
The “Modern Experience” isn’t just about running in the cloud anymore. With SharePoint Server 2019, communication sites can now also be created and configured on-prem.
As Bill Baer says, Microsoft is using the cloud as a baseline – and brings the best things over to SharePoint Server 2019 as well.
Things like:
While I live in the cloud most of my time, a lot of organizations I talk to are still on-prem, and these announcements will probably be pleasing to hear.
This blog post was originally posted on Tobias’s blog.
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