Your corporate data may reside locally, or through a privately hosted service, or available through the public cloud, and your app might be developed internally or purchased through some kind of public or private marketplace, providing a streamlined ability to buy the tools you need, point them toward your data, and be up and running. Microsoft's app model is a clear indication of this shift. The app model puts the capability in the hands of the end user, but for the power user -- for the user who needs capability beyond what is available through the app store, things get more complex. If you need more rich, robust solution than what can be offered through the app model, how that solution gets built and supported gets more complex, and more expensive
With the new cloud app model, apps are now self-contained, and can offer distinct pieces of functionality that either add to, or extend SharePoint’s core functionality. Mike Ferrara gives a great overview of the new SharePoint App Model , so there’s no need to go into the details here
According to our teams, the development and implementation trade-offs are challenging and a full App model migration for an organization with thousands of customized SharePoint On-Premise sites is a very significant undertaking
We are in the midst of a transition within the content management and collaboration space, and the rate of change is only accelerating. There are so many moving parts, so many big bets being made -- from cloud-based software distribution, identity management and storage, to the federation and...
Microsoft has indicated that they will be able to support millions of users and billions of documents in this model, but it will require significant changes to existing SharePoint solutions before they can be migrated to Office 365. 3. The SharePoint App model is immature As a precursor to a migration of SharePoint solutions to Office 365, many organizations are using the SharePoint App (or CSOM) model to build on-premise SharePoint 2013 Apps
To ensure a seamless experience across both on-premises and cloud-based environments, Workflow Manager integrates with the new SharePoint 2013 app model which enables workflows to reside in SharePoint 2013, Office 365 , SharePoint Online and Windows Azure . The integration with the SharePoint 2013 app model allows organizations to use the APIs, web services, and design templates available within this new technology release
The introduction of the app model to SharePoint 2013 is a fundamental paradigm shift in how administrators manage SharePoint properties, and how end users consume content
The new SharePoint app model, as shown in the first image below, has been designed in a distributed nature to support applications regardless of where they are hosted, as shown in the second image below, to ensure that SharePoint will be able adapt and evolve over time and scale with your business . You should utilizes the new SharePoint app model when your organization’s business or technical requirements require customization to support the following: Requires a full screen interfaces Entails the customization or the ribbon or menu actions Needs to be an app parts Requires workflows and/or remote event receivers Needs to pull in data from other systems Requires custom lists, fields or views Microsoft has also just recently the new Office 365 API Tools Preview which will open up the possibilities of not only integrating data but the ability to continue to streamline the security models and lower some of the fears and possibly realistic perceived risk regarding the storage of sensitive (PHI, PII, HIPAA, etc.) data within the cloud
There’s an App for that One dimension of BYOD that is very important to understand is the App model. An App is a purpose-built interface that tailors a user’s navigation and interaction with web services to a specific device’s operating system
There's a Visual Studio for the masses called Napa that's always game for writing and testing new business solutions across the app model-enabled enterprise
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