Office 365 data import service rolling out

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Here’s an interesting item from the Office 365 Roadmap in development.

Drive Shipping and Network Based Data Import for Office 365

The ability to import data into Office 365 in a quick and easy manner has been a known constraint of Office 365, and a solution for this issue has emerged as a key request from customers. We are working on a solution that will allow quicker imports of data into Exchange Online Archive Mailboxes.  You will now be able to import Exchange Online data through PST files into the service without using third party tools.   Drive Shipping and Network Based Ingestion options will use Azure-based services to import data.  Over time we will be extending this to other data types across Office 365.

This option is not yet available on my Office 365 tenant but here is a blog post of someone who has it and has documented the process:

http://blogs.perficient.com/microsoft/2015/05/office-365-using-the-new-pst-import-service/

What excites me is not the PST stuff but this line:

Over time we will be extending this to other data types across Office 365.

That to me reads that soon Office 365 will support drive shipping and network based ingestion of SharePoint and OneDrive for Business data! That will be huge and save massive amounts of time for customers looking to move the bulk of their files and folder information to Office 365, who may also be somewhat bandwidth limited.

The second thing I note here is:

Drive Shipping and Network Based Ingestion options will use Azure-based services to import data.

That further reinforces to my mind the fact that if you are an Office 365 IT professional you are going to need to be comfortable with Azure.

To me it is no longer Office 365, it is now Office365/Azure combined as a skill set you must have going forward.

Default SharePoint Online Team Site storage gets boosted

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Hallelujah is all I can say (although I have speculated that this would eventually happen previously).

Looking through some of the announcements in the Office 365 roadmap and I found this under the In Development section:

This update will bring two key enhancements for Sites in Office 365 and OneDrive for Business. First, you will be able to upload files greater than 2GB – up to 10GB – to both Sites’ document libraries and OneDrive for Business. We, too, will provide a greater amount of default storage for Office 365 Sites usage (for documents and information); Office 365 tenants will now get 1TB + (500MB * # of E/A/G users); this calculation used to be 10GB + (500MB * # of E/A/G users).

Yeah, Yeah and Yeah! Team Sites go from 10GB starting to 1TB starting! Yeah, Yeah and Yeah again!

It is listed as under development and I can’t wait because having Teams Sites starting at 10GB and OneDrive For Business starting at 1TB per user made many businesses think of OneDrive for Business as a team collaboration solution (which it ain’t what it was designed for).

Think about this, 10GB to 1,000GB per Team site for every new and existing Team Site. That is a 100x increase in one hit! The exponential power of the cloud.

Hallelujah is all I can say (now just gotta wait for it roll out).

Need to know podcast–Episode 81

We’ve covered off using OneDrive for Business as a collaboration solution, now Tas and I turn our attention to outlining how SharePoint Online Team Sites should be used within a business. We also discuss what strategies are successful when it comes to making SharePoint a winner within an organisation.

You can listen to the episode at:

http://ciaops.podbean.com/e/episode-81-tas-gray/

or subscribe to this and all episodes in iTunes at:

https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/ciaops-need-to-know-podcasts/id406891445?mt=2

The podcast is also available on Stitcher at:

http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/ciaops/need-to-know-podcast?refid=stpr

Don’t forget to give the show a rating as well as send me any feedback or suggestions you may have for the show. I’m also on the hunt for some co-presenters so if you are interested on being a regular part of the show please contact me.

Resources

Cloud Business Blueprint www.cloudbusinessblueprint.com

Skype for Business client roll out – https://blog.ciaops.com/2015/04/skype-for-business-client-goes-live-in.html

Attached Apps – https://blog.ciaops.com/2015/04/getting-started-with-attached-apps.html

Built in mdm for O365 – http://blogs.office.com/2015/03/30/announcing-general-availability-of-built-in-mobile-device-management-for-office-365/

AU data centers go live –http://blogs.msdn.com/b/auspartners/archive/2015/03/31/office-365-and-crm-online-services-land-on-australian-soil-today-what-you-need-to-know.aspx

Enabling SharePoint Online auditing

SharePoint Online has the ability to audit different actions that take place and then allow an administrator to view a report on these. Here is how you configure and work with SharePoint Online auditing.

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You will firstly need to access the SharePoint Online Site Collection you wish to enable auditing on as an administrator.

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In the top right hand corner of the site select the Cog icon to reveal the menu shown above.

From the menu that appears select Site settings.

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From here under Site Collection Administration in the lower right select Site collection audit settings.

If you can’t see this option then you are either not at the root of the Site Collection or you don’t have Site Collection administration rights.

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You should now see the options displayed above. In most cases all of the options here will be blank or unselected. This means that by default auditing on Site Collection is not enabled and you won’t be able to get any results until you enable something. So, if you need to track something, turn it on beforehand.

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By default, logged items are removed (trimmed) when they are more than 30 days old at the end of the month by default. Using the above options you can vary this and well as nominate a SharePoint Document Library into which audit reports will be saved before the audit log is trimmed.

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You will notice in the events to be audited it doesn’t include Opening or downloading documents, viewing items in lists, or viewing item properties option as it does with SharePoint on site at this point in time.

Once you check the items you desire, select the OK button at the bottom of the page to update your preferences and have them take effect.

Now, events that you selected to be audited will generate logs that you can view.

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Once a suitable time period has elapsed, return to the Site Settings and select Audit log reports from the Site Collection Administration area in the lower right hand side.

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You should now see a range of reports you can view. Some of these reports, such as the first one, Content Viewing, will not run as it is not possible to audit such events with SharePoint Online as has been mentioned above.

In this case however, select the Content modifications option to proceed.

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You will then be prompted to enter a location into which to store the report. Simply select an existing Document Library by using the Browse button.

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The report should complete successfully and provide a hyperlink, Click here to view the report, which you should select.

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A good thing with SharePoint Online is that it incorporates Office Online, which means Excel Online should now open to display the spreadsheet report as shown.

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The first tab, Audit Data – Table, will provide a summary of the events as shown above.

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While the second tab, Report Data 1, will provide more granular information as shown above.

So in summary, you’ll need to enable auditing on the events you wish to log within each individual SharePoint Online Site Collection. You’ll then need to run the audit reports to view the results after auditing has been enabled.

For more information see the following link:

Configuring audit settings for a site collection

Office 365 Compliance Center now available

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If you login to the Office 365 portal as an administrator and have a look under the Admin option on the left hand side you should now see a new item – Compliance

This will now be the central location to quickly and easily access anything to do with compliance in your organisation. Such as:

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– Archiving

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– eDiscovery

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– Retention

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– Permissions

These options will continue to increase over time so check back regularly to see what’s been added.

SharePoint Online save location

Many users are familiar with traditional drive letters when it comes to saving Office documents. In some cases they struggle to understand the transition to UNC paths, navigating to web based locations or opening from a browser. To help them with this transition they can pin common SharePoint Online document locations to their favourite Office applications access menus.

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Now, the traditional way to add a SharePoint location to an Office application was to locate to that location in SharePoint (i.e. a Document Library) and then select the Library tab in the top left. That revealed the Ribbon Menu. On this Ribbon Menu, towards the right, you would find the button Connect to Office. Selecting this would then map that location into your Office documents to make it easy to open those files directly.

Alas, from what I can determine this option doesn’t current work with SharePoint Online in Office 365. So here’s an alternative.

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If I open Word on the desktop as shown above you can see that I am not currently logged into my Office 365 account. I do this by selecting the Sign in to get the most of Office in the top right.

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I’ll now be prompted to enter my Office login details. I may also be prompted to enter my password if the system doesn’t recognise me.

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Once I have logged in successfully, my identity will appear in the top right as shown.

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Now when I go to open a document you see that I have already have my standard SharePoint Online Team site (Sites – CIAOPS here) and my personal OneDrive for Business (OneDrive – CIAOPS here). If I select my Team Site, on the right you’ll see a folder with your Team Site (in this case the folder CIAOPS).

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If you select this folder, Windows Explorer will open and so you your normal SharePoint Team site (i.e. http://tenant-name.sharepoint.com, here http://ciaops365e1.sharepoint.com). So you can now navigate to the file that you need to open.

However, what happens if you need to regularly open a file from a completely different site collection you have created? That is, with a different URL from your normal Team Site?

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Easy. Just select the Browse button and when Windows Explorer comes up change the URL in the path to be the one you want. In my case I have changed the URL to a completely separate Site Collection located at http://ciaops365e1.sharepoint.com/sites/test.

Navigate to the location you want to save and open a single file from there.

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If you now navigate back to the Open location option in the Office application you should see the new location listed as above. To save this location so it can be reused to open files simply hover over the entry and you should see a push-pin at the right. Press this to ‘pin’ it there.

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With the item pinned, every time you restart the Office application it will be there to allow you select files from there, even though, in this case, it is in a different Site Collection from the standard Team Site.

Need to know podcast–Episode 80

Wow! Eighty episodes in the can and only 20 more till I reach 100! No bad going at all, even if I do say so myself.

Tas joins me once again to cover off the latest Office 365 news as well as take a deep dive into SharePoint Team Sites. We look at what Team Sites are, the best way to use them and how you can get started using the resources they provide.

There is a lot of confusion between OneDrive for Business and Team Sites when it comes to Office 365. We have completed a deep dive into OneDrive for Business a few episodes ago, now it is time to go deep into the other option you have available with SharePoint Online. Listen up for more than just an explanation, learn how Tas and I suggest you implement Team Sites for customers.

You can listen to the episode at:

http://ciaops.podbean.com/e/episode-80-tas-gray/

or subscribe to this and all episodes in iTunes at:

https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/ciaops-need-to-know-podcasts/id406891445?mt=2

The podcast is also available on Stitcher at:

http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/ciaops/need-to-know-podcast?refid=stpr

Don’t forget to give the show a rating as well as send me any feedback or suggestions you may have for the show. I’m also on the hunt for some co-presenters so if you are interested on being a regular part of the show please contact me.

Resources

Office 365 Summit – http://summit.office.com

Cloud Business Blueprint – http://www.cloudbusinessblueprint.com

Business of Yammer – https://blog.ciaops.com/2015/03/the-business-of-yammer.html

Free SharePoint Email course – http://bit.ly/gs-spo