News
        
        SharePoint Roadmap: Migration Tool for SharePoint Online Coming 
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- April 21, 2020
Microsoft's roadmap for its various Microsoft 365 products has been updated, indicating several  new features are poised to roll out to SharePoint Online tenancies this month. 
For starters, Microsoft is releasing a public preview of  the SharePoint Migration Tool for use with SharePoint Server 2016 site  migrations to SharePoint Online in April. This capability, along with the ability to  migrate SharePoint Server 2019 sites to SharePoint Online, was promised during a  Microsoft Ignite session last year. 
The roadmap didn't mention the ability of the SharePoint  Migration Tool to move SharePoint Server 2019 sites, so that's likely still   to come, although the tool can also move SharePoint Server 2010 and SharePoint Server 2013 sites. It'll  move "files, folders, lists,  pages, permissions, metadata, versions, and more," per the roadmap's  description. Microsoft also earlier announced that it has extended the end-of-support date for  SharePoint Server 2010 by  about six months.
For SharePoint Online end users this month, Microsoft is delivering  a so-called "shy header" for Sites and Hub Sites. The header on these  sites will get smaller when the user scrolls down, which will maximize the  reading space on the page.
This month also brings stock images for SharePoint Online  users, which they can add to pages. The stock images can be accessed through  the "SharePoint image file picker."
Lastly, this month, SharePoint Online users will see the  label "Microsoft Power Automate" being used, instead of Microsoft  Flow. However, this name change will start to appear later for users of the  Office 365 Admin Center portal, plus in Microsoft's documentation. Microsoft had  announced the name swap back in November at its Ignite event, while also adding  robotic process automation capabilities to Power Automate at that time. 
An update on Power Automate's capabilities was described  earlier this month. Details can be found in a Microsoft Business  Applications Virtual Launch Event talk, accessible here.  Power Automate, part of Microsoft  Power Platform tooling, lets user concatenate a series of tasks.
Features that  Arrived in Q1
  Organizations should already be starting to see the  following SharePoint Online features, which rolled out in Q1, according to the  roadmap.
SharePoint Online administrators can now greatly expand  SharePoint site collections as there's now a new limit of 2 million site  collections per single Office 365 tenant. The previous limit was 500,000 site collections  per tenant.
SharePoint Online administrators now have access to the  Azure Active Directory Global Reader role. It permits IT pros to read settings,  but they can't execute management tasks. This new role is accessible through  the SharePoint Admin Center portal.
SharePoint Online's so-called "modern" pages are  now starting to appear in "classic" SharePoint Online home sites. This  item comes with a few caveats, though, per the roadmap:
  We will automatically update  classic home pages to a modern home pages if they have not been customized. You  can revert back if desired. Note: this update does not create an Office 365  Group for the team site.
Supposedly, it is easier to create news posts with modern  pages, and they may display better on mobile devices than classic sites do.
Another end user improvement that's available is the  ability to show "people cards" when hovering over a person's name or  face image within a SharePoint List or Library Web Part. A people card offers  additional information, such as a person's contact information.
Modern SharePoint Online pages and News items can now be  created in multiple languages for end users.
SharePoint Online users can now apply "if/then"  logic on rows and columns. That capability can be used "to apply color  formatting across SharePoint lists and libraries."
It's also possible now to edit metadata in a Web Part directly.  Users no longer have to go back to the Library or List view to  accomplish  that task.
Lastly, an Information Barriers private feature for  SharePoint and OneDrive got released (sign-up here). It adds governance controls  for organizations such as finance and health care to "avoid insider trading between different  department users in the organization."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.