Archive

Archive for July, 2006

The Colligo community is expanding / get ready for the next release

July 30th, 2006

I noticed this post by Alpesh Nakar at SharePointBlogs about his recent need to take SharePoint offline. He referred to Edwin Hakopian’s blog mentioning Colligo Reader and Colligo Contributor as a possible solution. I was pleased to see that after using it, Alpesh thought Colligo Reader was “…just great! Just what I needed!!!”. Thanks, Alpesh, for the feedback and thanks to Edwin for pointing it out in the first place.

We’ve been really pleased with the overwhelming response to our offline SharePoint products since we launched in April/May. We’ve had thousands of downloads over the past few months and many positive comments from users.

The engineering team is working hard on the next release. I received an early beta with SharePoint 2007-compatibility on Friday and it looks great. We’re going to start to work with early beta partners in September, so let us know if you are interested (send an email to partners@colligo.com). We’ve also received some great feedback on new features from our customers, so I’m looking forward some interesting new additions to the product line.

Barry.

Author: Barry Categories: SharePoint Tags:

Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference

July 11th, 2006

I’m in Boston this week at the Worldwide partner conference. Lots of people here – the conference is jammed. There was an accident in one of the tunnels last night – apparently part of the roof fell on a car – so everything is delayed.

Of course everyone at Microsoft is charged up. I just sat through a gold partner luncheon talk with Chris Caposella. Nice to see Microsoft putting so much emphasis on SharePoint.

I just noticed a mention about our offline SharePoint products on a Olaf’s blog (in German). Thanks Olaf!

I’ll post again if anything interesting comes up.

Barry.

Author: Barry Categories: SharePoint Tags:

Groove 2007 Offline SharePoint Feature Review – Summary

July 6th, 2006

Back in April we started to look at the upcoming capabilities in Groove 2007 for taking SharePoint offline. We posted a second time on the feature walkthrough of beta 2 in early June and then completed the walkthrough later in the month. This is the final post, and summary, in the series on taking SharePoint offline with Groove 2007.

Please bear in mind that I am the founder of Colligo Networks, a company engaged in developing offline collaboration software tools, so I am not a disinterested third party.

The ability to take SharePoint sites and content offline has been called the “Holy Grail” by both analysts and bloggers. This is because the ability to work offline is deemed to be essential for the growing population of mobile workers, yet it was not previously supported natively in SharePoint. In Office 2007, Microsoft has improved on this, most notably through desktop apps such as Outlook, Access and Groove. Some in the press have called Groove 2007 Microsoft’s answer for offline access to SharePoint content. On the other hand, Microsoft has been careful to describe it as a way of taking document libraries, only a portion of SharePoint content, offline. The purpose of this series has been to look at what will be included when Groove 2007 ships towards the end of this year. So, here’s the summary of what we found during testing.

Groove 2007 is a collaboration application designed for peer-to-peer information sharing, particularly for project teams and those that work across enterprise domains. It has a lot of functionality and therefore occupies a pretty big footprint on the desktop – about 700 MB. A small part of it’s functionality is an interface to SharePoint 2007, and for the purposes of this review, we concentrated on that aspect of it.

For Groove users wanting to take SharePoint files offline, the Files Tool is pretty easy to use. While online, the user simply enters the URL of the site they want to sync with and all document libraries are displayed. Once a library, folder or file is selected, Groove synchronizes the content down to the desktop and it is available offline. Files can be opened and edited and new files added to the library. Offline changes can then be sync’d with the Sharepoint server either manually or automatically on a time interval. Conflicting edits, when a change is made to the client copy and server copy of a file at the same time, are flagged during the sync cycle so that the user can choose the version they want to keep.

However, Groove 2007’s SharePoint implementation has several limitations. Its’ sole focus on SharePoint 2007 may be an issue for companies that can’t transition all of their content from SharePoint 2003 right away. In addition, users cannot create new documents, such as blank InfoPath forms, from SharePoint templates when disconnected since they are not stored locally.

Groove stores only a few default metadata columns, so document libraries cannot be sorted in the files tool based on custom metadata. Views are not supported either therefore, together with limited metadata, offline users will find it difficult to view, organize and retrieve documents from large SharePoint libraries like they can online. The fact that files are stored in a proprietary offline database as opposed to the file system means that embedded links in documents will not function offline like they do online.

Finally, by design Groove 2007 offline support is limited to SharePoint document libraries. This means that content in standard lists (i.e. links, events, announcements, issues, contacts, tasks etc.) and custom lists cannot be added, viewed or edited by offline users.

The bottom line: The developers at Groove (now Microsoft) have done a good job of implementing a tool that enables a user to sync files contained in SharePoint sites down to a workspace on their laptop. If a company has or is planning to deploy Groove to support project teams, then this is a must-have capability. However, for companies that are just looking for an offline solution for SharePoint for their mobile workforce, we would recommend looking at other solutions before making a purchase decision. Groove only supports a subset of SharePoint features and, given its size and complexity, may be significant overkill for the task.

Next up: I’ll do a summary of Outlook 2007 based on an updated evaluation of beta 2, and do a full review of Access 2007′s offline SharePoint capabilities. Let me know what you think.

Barry.

Author: Barry Categories: Groove 2007, SharePoint Tags: