Forum Discussion
Cian Allner
Oct 19, 2016Silver Contributor
Microsoft Teams
Microsoft Teams has just been unveiled? What does everyone think? The official announcements https://blogs.office.com/2016/11/02/introducing-microsoft-teams-the-chat-based-workspa...
Barry Cohen
Nov 03, 2016Copper Contributor
I like what I'm seeing but I agree - there are too many different ways of doing the same sorts of things, not all of which are inter-related. I don't have that much trouble as checking out new stuff is what I do, but my poor users are extremely overwhelmed.
Is there an overview of the different ways for folks to collaborate in Office 365 from a use case POV? I mean, there's traditional SharePoint sites, newer Team Sites, New Sites, OneDrive for Business, Office 365 Groups, Teams and of course shared access collaboration withing many Office programs - Word, Excel, OneNote and so forth.
From a provider POV all of the options make sense, but for users and their poor afflicted IT teams it's getting impossible to keep up with.
So, repeating my question - is there some sort of use case centered overview of all these different approaches?
Is there an overview of the different ways for folks to collaborate in Office 365 from a use case POV? I mean, there's traditional SharePoint sites, newer Team Sites, New Sites, OneDrive for Business, Office 365 Groups, Teams and of course shared access collaboration withing many Office programs - Word, Excel, OneNote and so forth.
From a provider POV all of the options make sense, but for users and their poor afflicted IT teams it's getting impossible to keep up with.
So, repeating my question - is there some sort of use case centered overview of all these different approaches?
Dave Walker
Nov 08, 2016Copper Contributor
Not sure I would ask that question as the answer will probably be use of them, as MS isn't going to intentionally shoot themselves in the foot. Which of course doesn't solve the problem of having too many options for communications.