News
        
        SharePoint Usage Hits 200 Million with Raft of Key Features on the Way
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- December 10, 2020
SharePoint Online now has  200  million active users, according to Microsoft officials, double what it had about a year ago.
Microsoft  shared  SharePoint Online intranet-adoption growth stats, as well as new  and notable features, this week to coincide with the Microsoft 365 Collaboration Conference online event, which was headlined by a keynote from Jeff Teper,  Microsoft's corporate vice president for Teams, SharePoint and OneDrive.
Jared Spataro, corporate vice president for  Microsoft 365, also chimed in with further SharePoint updates in an announcement where, among other things, he alluded  to new infrastructure undergirding Microsoft's SharePoint Online expansion:
  Over the last few years, we  have invested in a new SharePoint storage, platform, and experience architecture  deployed across more than 60 regional data centers supporting millions of  requests per second and exabytes of data. This new platform is enabling us to  deliver innovations to you faster and you will see us bring to market many new  SharePoint-powered experiences in collaboration, media, protection,  intelligence, custom solutions, and more in 2021.
Details on the  new infrastructure weren't described.
  
  New or Notable Microsoft 365 Features
  During the  keynote, Teper talked in general about SharePoint's role and how remote work is  here to stay now. To that end, Microsoft is providing measurement tools in  Microsoft 365 aiming to improve employee awareness of the use of their time, he  explained. Likely he was referring to Microsoft's newly released Productivity Score product.
Teper also  pointed to some new features, without always indicating when they'd arrive. The  new features apply to SharePoint Online, OneDrive storage Microsoft Teams  collaboration and Microsoft Lists -- all of which are typically bundled in  Microsoft 365 subscriptions.
SharePoint Features
On the  SharePoint Online side, Microsoft made it easier to create  news and announcements using prebuilt templates, which can include an  organization's branding and color scheme. There's also a new "Auto-News  Digest" feature, expected to arrive sometime this month, per a Microsoft  365 Roadmap listing. The Auto-News Digest feature sends  a summary of the week's news to employees and can be customized with a company  branding. 
A new "Boost" feature for the Microsoft  365 and SharePoint newsfeeds lets organizations put information at the top of  an employee's feed. Boost also works with the Microsoft Edge browser, Teper  said.
"With our new Boost feature you can  elevate these items until they've been read or had a certain number of  impressions, or until a given date or other criteria," Teper explained. 
There is a new "News Page Analytics"  capability to show audience engagement with content. 
"We're also introducing new  automatically generated analytics digests," Teper said. "There's no  need to go back and track down the metrics. Now they'll be delivered straight  to your inbox."
A new App Bar is coming to SharePoint  pages that'll offer a "consistent navigational experience" for end  users across an intranet, Teper explained. The App Bar shows a user's "most  important sites, resources and news, including their organization's top links,"  he added. 
Microsoft is  moving video to SharePoint Online instead of having it lodged in the Microsoft  Stream service, which adds some content management controls. The video content will  be "powered by the risk content management capabilities in SharePoint," Teper explained.
Teams  Features
  On the Teams side, there will be sizing  and search improvements. Team sizes are expanding for Microsoft 365 users.
"Today, you can have up to 10,000  users per team, and soon we'll be expanding that to 25,000 users per team,"  Teper said, although he didn't specify when the expansion will occur. 
Teams search results are getting enhanced.  Teper promised that a new search results page will present users with "more  relevant results, and additional context for each item grouped by messages,  people and files." It'll also be possible to filter these search results based  on dates, persons, files or other attributes, he added. 
A new Home Site App for Teams is bringing  SharePoint intranet content to Teams users. 
"With this Home Site App, employees  can easily stay informed and quickly share and discuss intranet content in  channels and chat, without ever having to leave Teams," Teper said. 
File  Sharing, Shared Folders and Lists
  Lots of Microsoft 365 user improvements  were described, touching on file sharing, adding shared folders to OneDrive,  plus the perks associated with using Microsoft Lists. 
It'll be possible to show permissions  associated with links to files when sharing them. End users will get a warning,  such as "Some members don't have access," when the sharing isn't allowed,  Teper explained. The Microsoft Roadmap described a  similar feature that's said to be "rolling  out." 
Users who move files stored on OneDrive or  SharePoint will be getting the ability to reshare already-shared files. This  feature is being added so that people don't have to go through that process  again after files get moved. 
Microsoft also is bringing the ability to  put Microsoft 365 shared folders on OneDrive personal storage for easier  access. Teper called this feature "Add to OneDrive." The Roadmap  described this  item as having been "launched" back in  September. 
Teper pointed to the recently  launched Microsoft Lists solution as being "powered by  SharePoint." He suggested that the new Microsoft Lists product offers an  easier way to create and access lists. 
End users can create lists using a  template and Microsoft provides "schema formatting" for common  information types used in organizations, such as issue tracking and events  organizing. It's also possible to create lists from Excel data. Users can put a  list into their personal storage or into a team site. 
Teper added that Microsoft Lists for iOS will  be "coming later this year." It'll bring "a fantastic, simple  mobile experience" with "feature parity."
Microsoft Classic Search Changes
Microsoft  Search is getting "modernized" by dropping support for some FAST  Query Language (FQL) elements in SharePoint Online's so-called "classic"  mode, starting on Feb. 1, 2021, Microsoft explained this week. 
Those dropped elements  are being "deprecated," which usually means that they are still  around but Microsoft will stop development efforts associated with them.  However, the dropped FQL elements were typically described as being "removed."  
For instance,  Microsoft will be removing the COUNT operator and the FILTER operator, and  several others, in February. It's also removing several conditions elements.  Microsoft is pointing classic SharePoint developers to use the Kusto Query  Language (KQL) instead. 
"We  recommend, where applicable, using the default SharePoint query language, KQL  where your business requirements can be similarly met," the announcement  indicated, adding that "KQL is the default query language for building  search queries."
Additionally,  the ability to set up "authoritative pages" for improving search  results in classic SharePoint Online will get removed on Feb. 1, 2021. Also  getting dropped at that time is the ability to display "personal favorites"  in classic search results. Microsoft wants SharePoint Online administrators to  use "personal query history" instead in search results.
All of these  search changes just will affect users of SharePoint classic pages. Users of "modern"  SharePoint pages aren't affected.