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July 2007

How SharePoint Matches up to Public Folders

Learn about SharePoint to help you assess a potential transition
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It's not too early to prepare for retirement—of public folders, that is. Eventually public folders will no longer be in Microsoft Exchange. In September 2006, Gartner Research published a report recommending that organizations prepare to migrate away from public folders (http://download.microsoft.com/download/6/D/A/6DA5F58F-5146-4897-8111-DF32896FC1B7/Rapport_Gartner.pdf). But never fear: SharePoint's Microsoft Outlook and Exchange integration features enable administrators to begin the transition away from public folders to using SharePoint as an alternative repository for shared information. In fact, Microsoft has already begun to emphasize SharePoint as its collaboration platform to replace public folders. Although SharePoint isn't a perfect replacement for public folders at all sites, it can ease the transition away from public folders.

Let's peruse some popular public folder features and how they map to the latest SharePoint technology. Some features apply to both Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 (WSS 3.0—a component of Windows Server 2003, providing core SharePoint functionality) and Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 (MOSS 2007—which adds enriched functionality such as enterprise content management); other features apply to MOSS 2007 only.

Outlook Integration
Outlook is for many the primary interface for business communications, and the accessibility of public folders from Outlook has been fundamental to their adoption.

Outlook synchronizes public folder content to the offline folder store (OST), to let users work with mailbox and public folder data while offline. WSS 3.0 provides integration with the Microsoft Office 2007 suite, the Microsoft Office 2003 suite, and Outlook in particular. You can connect SharePoint calendars and contact lists to Microsoft Office Outlook 2003. If you're using Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, you can also connect SharePoint task lists, discussion boards, and document libraries. Other SharePoint items, such as custom lists, custom views, and custom properties are not yet supported.

To connect a SharePoint container to Outlook, use your browser to navigate to the container and select Connect to Outlook from the Action menu.

The first time you connect a SharePoint container to Outlook, Outlook creates a PST file in your Windows profile. The file is named SharePoint Folders.pst for Outlook 2003 and SharePoint Lists.pst for Outlook 2007. A folder is created in the PST file that represents the connected container. Subsequent container connections are represented as additional folders in the PST. Outlook uses its Send/Receive functionality to synchronize content between SharePoint and Outlook. Outlook 2003 provides one-way offline synchronization (SharePoint to Outlook) for calendars and contact lists. Outlook 2007 extends this integration providing two-way offline synchronization for calendars, contacts, tasks, and discussion lists and one-way synchronization (SharePoint to Outlook) for SharePoint document libraries. Although you might not want to move completely over to SharePoint until its offline synchronization improves, if you're using public folders for collaborating on documents, SharePoint is actually a better environment in spite of the one-way synchronization limit.

You can use Office 2007's Edit Offline function to perform manual synchronization of Office documents stored in document libraries. Outlook 2007 keeps track of documents in the SharePoint PST that were modified while you were offline. Office 2007 adds a link to each modified document to the Offline Documents search folder in the PST, providing a single location to track all offline changes. After you're back online, you can open each modified document and save your changes back to the SharePoint server. Office 2007 handles any version conflicts.

Other Office 2007 products such as Microsoft Office Groove 2007 and Microsoft Office Access 2007 provide capabilities such as two-way synchronization between document libraries and custom lists, respectively. (For more information about synchronizing data by using Groove, see the Microsoft Virtual Lab at http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui/webcasteventdetails.aspx?eventid=1032326933&eventcategory=3&culture=enus&countrycode=us; for more information about synchronizing data between SharePoint and Access, see the Microsoft article "Introduction to integrating data between Access and a SharePoint site" at http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/access/ ha101314631033.aspx.) Additionally, third-party products such as Colligo Contributor for SharePoint, from Colligo Networks, provide two-way synchronization of lists, document libraries, and form libraries, including all associated properties and views.

Discussion-Group Integration
You can use Exchange public folders to archive group discussions. Public folders have an associated email address that lets an administrator make the public folder a member of a Distribution Group (DG). All messages sent to the DG are posted to the associated public folder, effectively creating an archive of the discussions emailed to the group. The public folder permissions must allow group members to create new content in the folder; otherwise, attempts to post to the folder will fail.

To replace the public folder functionality, you can create a group in SharePoint that maps to a DG in Active Directory (AD) and to a discussion board in SharePoint. The members added to the SharePoint group are automatically added to the associated DG in AD. The AD DG appears in the Global Address List (GAL), and any messages sent to it are sent to all the DG members and posted to the SharePoint discussion board. The discussion board permissions have to allow DG members to contribute content to the board. The discussion board honors threading from replies, and each post in the archive contains a history of the conversation thread.

This approach is analogous to the public folder approach, especially as you can synchronize the list to Outlook and it's accessible from a Web browser, although the archives go to a different place for the user. Another added benefit is the fact that SharePoint automatically indexes the content stored in the archive and thus the discussions are accessible through the SharePoint Search UI.

An administrator can configure the SharePoint farm to allow incoming email, which means that document libraries, form libraries, and lists can receive content via email messages. When you configure a list or document library to accept incoming email, you can specify whether to retain the original message or only the attachments. If more than one document is attached to the message, SharePoint posts each attachment as an individual item in the document library.

When enabling a SharePoint container to accept email, the user identifies an email address for the container. If the SharePoint Directory Management Service is enabled, a matching contact object is automatically created in the appropriate organizational unit (OU) in AD. Unfortunately, in Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 and Exchange 2000 Server environments, the Directory Management Service doesn't populate all the required attributes for a mail-enabled contact object, causing attachments mailed to the container to be dropped. For more information about dropped email attachments, see "Attachment is missing from an email message that is sent to a Microsoft Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 document library" (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/926891).

Other anomalies exist on the Exchange Server 2007 side in regard to mail-enabled contact creation. For example, although the Directory Management Service relies on the recipient update service to stamp the proxyAddresses attribute, Exchange Server 2007 doesn't which means that objects provisioned by using the Directory Management Service will be incomplete.

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