Comment on Isn't OneDrive/Sharepiont the exact OPPOSITE of a shared drive?
Zeth0s@lemmy.world 1 year agoAnd you don’t need SharePoint for that
Comment on Isn't OneDrive/Sharepiont the exact OPPOSITE of a shared drive?
Zeth0s@lemmy.world 1 year agoAnd you don’t need SharePoint for that
ShittyRedditWasBetter@lemmy.world 1 year ago
No but rarely are the labor hours spent to do it correctly. The same with foss, implementations is expensive most of the time and that’s why you pay someone to do it for you.
Zeth0s@lemmy.world 1 year ago
SharePoint concept and implementation is awful though. Better have different tools for the different tasks and track different types of artifacts and documents, than using SharePoint. And everything else in normal file system.
SharePoint is the typical mammoth that does everything and it does it extremely badly. But it’s Microsoft, so all companies must use it
ShittyRedditWasBetter@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Very much disagree. MS is better than what 98% of people will implement themselves.
Zeth0s@lemmy.world 1 year ago
You don’t need to reimplement SharePoint, just to use different processes and tools.
That said, if you are happy, that’s absolutely fine. I luckily don’t use it. It’s there, someone try to put there some document because “we paid millions for it” (I don’t know if they really did…), after a few frustrating loop of the crappy check in/check out broken system most people give up. I don’t even need to complain. It’s sufficient to wait a couple of weeks and someone else will, no one will find any benefit, and at the end it will completely dropped. Until someone remember how much we paid for it, and will try again.
I call it “the cycle of corporate hype”
JigglySackles@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Sharepoint is actually very well made. It has great versatility and extensibility. The issue that you and others run into that leads to the assumption that sharepoint is bad, is that it was deployed by inexperienced or potentially incompetent people. Most of the time it’s just inexperienced people that aren’t given the time to properly train for a deployment and are told to basically wing it because “there’s no money to train you how to do it right” or other bs cheapskate business excuse.
Zeth0s@lemmy.world 1 year ago
In my company they paid a lot of money for it, like too much. Simply very few people like it. Mainly paper work people.
Because they paid so much for it, they always try to convince people to use it… Currently we are using it as a glorified s3 bucket for PowerPoint presentations to link them on confluence… But there is always someone who tries again to push it, before it’s miserably fails again.
That’s my experience. I am sure someone find it very useful.