jsnjzlw 发表于 2017-5-24 09:10:57

SharePoint 开发者如是说



[*]1. What Do   Sharepoint Bloggers Have To Say About Their Product?
[*]2.   Introduction to get a better perspective of Sharepoint development I   thought I would look at how the Sharepoint community views their own   product in their own blogosphere. Here are a few select comments that I   doubt Microsoft will be sharing with its customers anytime soon....
[*]3. I think   SharePoint sucks, and if you are considering going for a new platform for   your collaboration or your publishing or your wiki or your blogging needs,   choose differently.
[*]4. If I   want a good blogging solution, why would I want a mediocre wiki site, a   mediocre document management solution, and a mediocre web content   management solution, bundled with a mediocre blogging solution? This won’t   give me anything I need, compared to getting a good blogging solution and   a good wiki solution as separate products.
[*]5.   SharePoint has many quirks, performs like a milk van on a steep slope and   makes most developers moan
[*]6. As was   explained to me, Sharepoint is like having your kids put your laundry   away. You know where you put it, but they put it somewhere else. Or, it's   like telling someone that what they are looking for is in Alabama.   Technically correct, but useless.
[*]7. One of   the things I've noticed on blogs, user group meetings, etc., is that all   of the most successful projects seem to be 'SharePoint and something'.   SharePoint and a better blog. SharePoint and a WCM system. SharePoint and   a real RM system.
[*]8.   Sharepoint is terrible for a developer. If you can deal with the huge   limitations out of the box and don’t have to do any coding or   customization, OK. Otherwise, you’re better off using another platform.
[*]9.   Sharepoint: simple to use out of the box, impossible to customize.
[*]10. IT'S A   COMPLETE PILE OF SHIT. With sugar on top that appeals to owners and CEOs   and they realize later what a mistake it was to even use the API.
[*]11. I have   purposely stayed away from any job opportunity that mentioned coding in   SharePoint. As soon as I hear that in an interview or even see it in the   job description, I flee. I stop right there and pass the opportunity   because I have been in environments that think SharePoint is this end-all   solution when in the end it's a complete API pile and in about 2-3 years   you end up having huge costs involved after spending money coding (hacking   around the shitty API and everything else that SharePoint throws in your   face)
[*]12.   SharePoint's support of non-IE browsers is horrible.
[*]13.   Customers are easily impressed and sold when a salesperson, whether that   person is a consultant or a bone-fide seller, demonstrate how easy it is   to hack together a working proof-of-concept. When a real architect or   developer enters the project, customers are shocked to learn that   developing a SharePoint solution is nothing different from any other   software development project and is a lot more expensive than the   impression left by the sales process.
[*]14.   Development is a royal pain in SharePoint.
[*]15.   Writing custom code for SharePoint is like wearing handcuffs,
[*]16.   Developing in Sharepoint is like swimming in a burning river, with your   arms and legs tied to heavy rocks!
[*]17. Stuff   that takes 10 min in e.g. aps.net or WinForms, takes hours / days in   Sharepoint
[*]18. It is   one of the most inflexible applications I have ever used.
[*]19. Far   too complex to install, configure, and customize. It is not agile.
[*]20. It’s a   perfect example of trying to build something that does everything, making   the software so complicated that it is so hard to use, that it is useless.
[*]21. I work   for a large company - trying to do the basics, and essentially it's become   a career to get Microsoft products to work. I just wanted to create a   dashboard and took me days to figure out how to do this on SharePoint.   Waste of time.
[*]22. It is   far more easy too learn J2EE, Ruby On Rails, C++ multi-inheritance or any   other than the sharepoint architecture and permissions and mysites, and   sites ,subsites, lists, wikis and excekls, and kpis all together
[*]23. I tend   to agree that Sharepoint sucks. Using it is like closing your eyes,   holding your breath and spinning around for thirty seconds. When you’re   done you don’t know where you are, you are very dizzy, and feel like you   might throw up…
[*]24. it’s   not very user friendly, and searching for a particular document, library   or list on a Sharepoint site can be at the very least problematic
[*]25. STAY   AWAY… Sharepoint can be an incredibly useful tool, but in any office where   I’ve seen it deployed, it’s acting merely as a web-based front-end to the   file-system.
[*]26. I hate   Sharepoint with the passion of 10,000 burning Lotus Notes users
[*]27.   Honestly, I found Sharepoint so inadequate and typical of a first   generation MS product that I could only shake my head at it. If it was made   by anyone else than MS and had to compete on its merits I suspect most of   us would have never even heard of it
[*]28. I've   developing under sharepoint for the better part of this month and I have   to say Sharepoint sucks big time. Sure, as long as you need only the basic   features, you're fine. But when you decide you need something extra, even   if it's so simple a web developer would implement in an hour (say voting   for documents), then you're in for a ride. Developing for sharepoint is   nothing but a nightmare. The system is overly complex, unintuitive and   just plain bizarre. I swear, we've spent almost a week trying to implement   some of the features, when we could have written a fully functional   php/postgresql site in that time.
[*]29. Share   point sucks ****. It is confusing, the documentation is little or absent.   However, all the higher ups at my corporation have accepted it with open   arms because the consultants told them too. The consultants are now   getting paid 60 dollars an hour to teach it. I hate share point.
[*]30. I've   been DEVELOPING with Sharepoint for a YEAR now. IT SUCKS, IT SUCKS, IT   SUCKS....
[*]31. The   bottom line is that the team in charge of developing sharepoint sucks   (believe me I am an ex MS employee).
[*]32.   SharePoint is only good for what it was developed for: Collaboration. I   think where SharePoint begins to suck is when management is sold on the   fact that EVERYTHING needs to go into SharePoint. Then developers start   thinking that SharePoint sucks...because if applications are expected to   be developed in SharePoint, well, it sucks.
[*]33. My   company believe it's a document control system. Huh! Nowhere near it and   definitely not 'out of the box'. A consultants dream to milk unsuspecting   users of the platform. Absolute rubbish to use
[*]34. Our   web guys can barely make the thing work correctly, so how are end users   supposed to make it work correctly and design sites that are easy for   others to use, navigate and find information? We are going to end up with   a bunch of lists and shared folders that store Word, Excel, and PPT files   with absolutely no context to the documents and thousands of different   ways that teams and "site admins" will use to present   information.
[*]35. I am a   SharePoint admin guy for my department, and have attended a $1500   SharPoint course that took two days. It is not intuitive, and follows   little of Windows years of established PC convention
[*]36. I have   noooooo idea how this is making things better. All it does is it makes you   buy more MS products and makes you buy a MS SQL server - The pathetic part   is that I have to sell this to my users
[*]37. Holy   ****, ****ryin out loud! I hate SharePoint. There is absolutely no   Software Dev process .... God Speed to you developers who choose to suffer   with this any further.
[*]38.   Sharepoint is great if you are going to use it OUT OF THE BOX ONLY,   otherwise SHAREPOINT IS A PIECE OF GARBAGE
[*]39. The   object model has countless nuances to work around even for doing simple   tasks. There are 3000 poorly named variables for each object. Half of them   don't work as you'd expect so you find yourself either copy/pasting   previous code you've spent 3 weeks developing to add a single list or you   find yourself spending 3 weeks developing code from scratch (1 week in the   documentation, another 2 weeks on google trying to find another poor soul   that has dealt with the same issue).
[*]40. Aside   from the “it’s a pain to work with factor”, it doesn’t even live up to   it’s intended purpose,
[*]41. I get   paid doing this sharepoint crap and what a waste of corporate time and   money, I personally don’t care, f*ck my company and their like, but if it   were my corporation I would be upset to see my developers building   sharepoint based CMS. WTF, this thing is really useless crap.
[*]42. Once I   got a look at SharePoint at the evil-empire, I thought how typical of   Microsoft to tout something that is not just a nightmare, but ineffective
[*]43. The   difference between wikis and sharepoint is that sharepoint sucks.
[*]44. If   SharePoint wasn't a Microsoft product, slim change anyone ever heard about   it. SharePoint is great on paper, but a horrible product for developers   and end users.
[*]45. The   only people who like it, are people who never seen any other product, and   people who can make money from installing, designing and updating it.
[*]46. I've   been at three companies where SharePoint was   "implemented". Someone set it up and expected developers   and such to use it, but no one could figure out the purpose of it, or how   to navigate. At two of these companies, MediaWiki was implemented and   quickly took over most of what SharePoint was trying to do (but then, we   never could figure out what SharePoint was for).
[*]47. It's   true that no one would use SharePoint if Microsoft didn't bundle it with   corporate packages. This software is just crap.
[*]48.   Developing SharePoint Web Parts and applications sucks. And we're not even   using all of the features of SharePoint (THANK GOD). After the excitement   and relief that came with .Net Framework with Visual Studio it's like   trading a perfume bath with horse crap.
[*]49. If you   ever tried to clone Sharepoint, you know Sharepoint sucks. If you ever   tried using Sharepoint with anything else but IE and MS Offie, you know   Sharepoint sucks. If you ever need to login as different users on   Sharepoint, you know Sharepoint sucks
[*]50. I was   all happy about it until they said I had to convert it to Sharepoint. I   took a look at Sharepoint and I threw up in my mouth a little. It’s the   worst piece of crap there is. Like you said, it doesn’t even do Ajax   right. It quite simply, sucks. There are way better alternatives. But like   you said, too bad corporate America is stuck on that.
[*]51. It is bloat   ware, lacks efficiency, overly complex and simply mediocre. I consider   this an enterprise virus.
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