Wednesday, December 16, 2009

New from Microsoft on Project 2010

Microsoft has released some new documents for those looking forward to the next release of Microsoft Project:


Monday, November 30, 2009

The Microsoft Update Center - an idea that was long overdue

We've talked about this for ages: a site where all the updates that Microsoft makes available to partners like ourselves and anyone else who takes the time to go looking for them but in an easy to access index.

Well, Microsoft's ears must have been burning cause here it is:
The Update Center has updates for Microsoft Office (including Microsoft Project), Servers (including Microsoft Project Server) and "related products.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Microsoft unveils Project 2010 Beta

Yes, you too can get a preview of what’s coming in Microsoft Project 2010. Microsoft has released the beta for Microsoft Project Professional 2010 and Microsoft Project Server 2010. We’ve seen these products in the office for some time as HMS is a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner who has the Microsoft EPM Competency plus I worked on Microsoft’s EPM Partner Advisory Council for years and completed my participation on that council only recently.
But now you can start seeing what will be coming in the new product.

Among functionality that I think will be well received you’ll see:

In Project Professional:
  • Timeline View. This is like the Visio timeline bar that many people like for summary views
  • Team Planner. This interactive view lets team managers drag and drop tasks onto a team member’s schedule
  • The ribbon menu (also known as the fluid user interface)
In Project Server:
  • Integrated Portfolio and Project Server functionality. Yes, they’re together at last.
  • Project Data Pages. Not enough has been said about these but I think they may end up being the most powerful aspect of what people will now do with Project Server. The PDPs let you create forms to gather data and then use workflow to move data into different parts of the EPM system based on the context of the data at that stage of the workflow.
You can find the beta for Project Professional 2010 at: www.microsoft.com/project/2010/en/us/default.aspx.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

What’s coming in Project Desktop 2010?

(Crossposted from my EPMGuidace blog:http://www.epmguidance.com/)

With all the talking I’ve done about Project Server 2010 and its new functionality, I didn’t want to forget about Project Desktop. The desktop versions of Project 2007 are still divided into two flavours: Standard and Professional but there are a few differences and some interesting new features.

First of all, Standard and Professional 2010 will be available in both 32bit and 64bit versions. If a 64bit architecture doesn’t sound attractive you’ve never loaded a mega project into Project Standard. The great news about a 64bit environment and a 64bit version of Project is that it can access memory beyond the 2GB limit of 32bit. If you are loading large projects or many projects as part of a program then this is a huge improvement.

One change that is common to both Project Standard 2010 and Project Professional 2010 is the Fluent UI – you may have heard this referred to as the Menu Ribbon. This new feature was completely expected since the release of the Ribbon in Office 2007. The ribbon will make the look and feel of Project Desktop match the rest of Office.

The new Timeline view is one of my favourites. It shows a single bar at the top of the screen very similar to the timeline object in Visio that represents the entire project schedule. A zoom control shows how much of the total timeline bar is being shown in the schedule at the bottom. Want to zoom to the 2nd half of the schedule? Want to see the whole schedule? Want to slide forward to the end of the year?

In previous versions of Project Standard vs. Project Professional the major distinction was Project Professional’s ability to connect to Project Server. That distinction is still present in Project Desktop 2007. However, there are several features in Project Professional that will not be present in Project Standard. Microsoft sees this as an opportunity to entice users to move up from Standard to Professional. These “Project Professional only” features include:

One of the other features that’s sure to be popular with Project Desktop 2010 is the enhancement to the copy/paste functionality. Now tasks from Excel can be copied and pasted while retaining formatting and other key data.

Team Planner View
This new view in Project Professional 2010 is a new dynamic view in the desktop application that shows unassigned tasks in one window and above it a list of tasks organized by resource. So a team leader can see the existing work for their team and then drag tasks into the schedule of their team.

Inactive Tasks
A much-requested feature that appears in Project Professional 2010 but not in Standard 2010 is the ability to declare a task as inactive without having to delete it. An inactive task will no longer affect the schedule but it may contain critical information such as actual costs or baseline information that we’d like to maintain.

Sync with SharePoint tasks
Project Professional 2010 will include an ability to load a list of tasks from SharePoint and then to keep that schedule synchronized with the SharePoint list.

What about backwards compatibility?
You’ll be happy to know that Project Standard and Professional 2010 are able not only to open a Project Standard or Professional 2007 with reduced functionality in a compatibility mode and save the files in the older format. The new desktop tools can also open and save data in Project 2000-2003 or Project 98 formats. Project Standard and Professional 2010 can even create a new project and save it in these older formats. Of course some functionality may not be available in these older compatibility formats.

There’s lots more but as you can see there’s been a big focus on the Desktop for the 2010 release!.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Stand by for Project 2010 news...

I'm at the Microsoft Project Conference this week where shortly there''ll be a bunch of news to share on Project 2010. Until Wednesday, September 17th however, mum's the word as everyone is under NDA to not share any details.
I'll be publishing a number of posts on my EPM Guidance blog at http://www.epmguidance.com/ starting Wednesday so stop by there to find out more.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Project Conference 2009 in Phoenix next week

Stay tuned. Updates from the Microsoft Project Conference 2009 in Phoenix Arizona will be in this space next week as it happens.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Project and Project Server August 2009 Cumulative Update

Microsoft has released a new cumluative update for Project 2007 and Project Server 2007. dated August 25, 2009. Information on the key elements is linked below. See Microsoft's guidance on deploying cumulative updates for more information on how to deploy these updates if they're applicable to you. The links below include both descriptions and download links so you can see if fixes you require are included in this cumulative update.

Office 2007 Cumulative Update for August 2009

Description of the Project 2007 hotfix package (Project.msp): August 25, 2009
Download of the Project 2007 hotfix package (Project.msp): August 25, 2009


Description of the Project Server 2007 hotfix package (Pjsrvapp.msp, Pjsrvwfe.msp): August 25, 2009
Download of the Project Server 2007 hotfix package (Pjsrvapp.msp, Pjsrvwfe.msp): August 25, 2009

Description of the Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 Cumulative Update Server Hotfix Package (Sts.msp): August 25, 2009
Download of the Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 Cumulative Update Server Hotfix Package (Sts.msp): August 25, 2009

Description of the SharePoint Server 2007 Cumulative Update Server Hotfix Package (Coreserver.msp): August 25, 2009
Download of the SharePoint Server 2007 Cumulative Update Server Hotfix Package (Coreserver.msp): August 25, 2009

Talking about: computer based training

Over the years, one of the most challenging changes to the success of project management software has been the lack of training and training materials that are included in any deployment. I wrote about this time ago in an article entitled "Batteries not included". Organizations used to allocate a portion of their implementation budget to training and, as the price of project management software has dropped to a fraction of it used to cost in the 70's and 80's the amount of budget available to training has dropped proportionally. When software costs less than $1,000 and the budget for training is only $100 how do you get enough training time in on the basics to become effective with the tool?

One of the aspects of project management software training that has evolved in a very good way has been the evolution of computer-based training. Vendors like Apex Web Media have made
Microsoft Project Tutorial Videos that you can follow along at your own pace. If your copy of Microsoft is handy, you can watch the lesson, then immediately turn back to your project data and try some of the techniques you’ve just learned.

It’s easy to imagine such tools being used to bring a large number of users up to speed on basic functionality of Project at a very low cost. At Apex, I was able to try several introductory lessons for free online and I was happily surprised to find lessons not only in Project desktop but also in the Project Web Access client among the dozens of lessons available. This type of technology may just fill the gap for those Project deployments with limited training budgets.