Posts Tagged ‘project 2010’

Service Pack 1 (SP1) for Microsoft Project and Project Server 2010

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011
ANNOUNCING: Announcing The Release Of Service Pack 1 (SP1) for Microsoft Project and Project Server 2010

Microsoft has announced the release of Service Pack 1 for Microsoft Project and Project Server.

You can find details on the enhancement for this service pack at: Announcing Service Pack 1 for Microsoft Project & Project Server 2010.

Microsoft recommends that you read the guidance below and the information on the service pack prior to installing:

Microsoft is also strongly recommending deploying the June 2011 Cumulative update for Project and Project Server when you install the SP1 update.

For more information go to the official Microsoft announcement at: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/project/archive/2011/05/16/project-2010-sp1.aspx

Get a free trial of Project Server 2010

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Want to try Project Server2010 for free? The best way to do that is to get a free hosted trial.  Ah, but where would you find such a fabulous deal?  Right here, that’s where.  HMS Software, Microsoft and Project Hosts have teamed together so you can enjoy a free trial of Project Server 2010.  Just go to the HMS Free Project Server 2010 Trial site to take a look at the latest Project Server!

New look at Assignment Units in Project 2010

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Heather O’Cull from the Microsoft Project Development team has a great blog post explaining how Project deals with the rate to consume a resource on a task through the Assignment Units field.  You’ll see there’s some debate from commenters on whether the change in this functionality is the right move but whether you agree or not, this is a key element of Project’s Calculation engine that it’s important to know about just so you know how it works behind the scenes.  For those who do resource calculations in Microsoft Project, I encourage you to take a look.   You can find the post at the Project Dev Team Blog.

Hold onto your hats – Project2010 now arriving

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Microsoft Project Server 2010Well, we told you it was coming and now the release of Microsoft Project and Project Server is just about upon us. On May 1st, Microsoft’s Enterprise clients and its partners will be able to access the official release of Microsoft Project 2010 and Microsoft Project Server 2010. While the official name of the products has dropped the word “Office” (It was quite a mouthful), both products continue to be part of the Microsoft Office family of products and will be released at the same time.

That’s not an accident.

Microsoft has made it quite clear that its strategy is to leverage client’s interest in one product line by tying it to another. The Office group has done this very successfully. You don’t think anymore of just buying Word or just buying Excel. No, you buy one of the bundles of Office and those products are contained within it.

Project and Project Server will continue to have their own licneces and aren’t available as part of any of the Office bubdles for now but there a bunch of other things that have changed.

Say bye-bye to Office Project Portfolio Server
One big change is how Microsoft has rolled some of the most popular Portfolio Selection functionality from Portfolio Server 2007 into Project Server 2010. There will not be a Portfolio Server 2010 product and, while existing users of Portfolio Server 2007 will see updates of that stand-alone product for some time, any new development on Portfolio management will focus on Project Server.

Did you say 32bit? Bite your tongue!
It’s all 64 all the time for server installations now. Installing Project Server will no longer be possible on a 32bit version of Windows Server. The new 64bit architecture makes a lot more memory available to Project Server but may cause some companies to take pause as the consider the costs of hardware.

Project Standard and Project Professional will still work on both 64bit and 32 bit versions of Windows Vista and Windows7.

Gotta love SharePoint
Previous versions of Project Server could be installed with either the free Windows SharePoint Services (WSS) of the licensed Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS). (Don’t you love how many acronyms we use in this industry?) Project Server will require users to have a MOSS license. The system will now longer support just the free WSS. This may be a license cost issue for some users.

So that’s the bad news. What’s the good news?
There’s good news in this release in a couple of areas. First of all, the underlying architecture of Project Server and Project Desktop hasn’t changed since 2007 and that will almost certainly mean the stability of the product at release time will be better than 2007 was.

Rather than rewriting the system’s architecture, there are new features that should be popular including Project Data Pages that allow Project data questionaires to be gathered online and then woven into a workflow, some improvements in the timesheet that will be great for those tring to do a full timesheet week and then update the project progress, some easier dashboarding tools that should allow people with intermediate skills to create great graphical representations of their data and, of course, the aforementioned Portfolio Selection functionality.

On the Desktop look for a distinction between Project Standard and Project Professional that will no doubt result in some kind of push to have people upgrade to the more powerful version.

Project Professional will have a new Timeline View and a new Team Management view which I think will go over well.
The scheduling tool will not default to automatic scheduling and you’ll be able to enter a description rather than a duration iin the duraton column as a sort of placeholder for the data to be entered later. Purists may howl at this. It’s another sign of how Microsoft Project has become so ubiquitous and how the product must now cater much more to non professional project managers.

Expect the Microsoft marketing beast to crank up to a fever pitch in the coming weeks. It’s already been moving forward at a pedestrian speed for months but as the product hits the market, Microsoft will do what it does best as it announces everything new in the Office 2010 family of products.

Microsoft unveils Project 2010 Beta

Saturday, November 28th, 2009

Project Server 2010 BetaYes, 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.
The Project Server 2010 beta is at:
www.microsoft.com/global/project/2010/en/us/RichMedia/secondary/server_home.html.