The new Edge Chromium Stable release has arrived!

Microsoft launched finally the first Stable Release of Edge Chromium.

For home and private use: download the new Edge Stable Release here.

For enterprises: download your desired Edge Release here.

As I pointed out in my previous post Microsoft Edge Chromium, this is the next step in optimal Office 365 online work.

For more information on the roll out and the download options, see the recent Microsoft Blog Post Upgrading to the new Microsoft Edge.

2020-01-29 17_55_14-Download New Microsoft Edge Browser _ Microsoft

(above, screenshot from the download page)

 

Happy Office 365 Browsing!

Microsoft Edge Chromium

Microsoft Edge Chromium based, the future for Office 365 and Enterprise surfing.

The new upcoming Edge (very soon as here and there reported), fully reworked and based on the Chromium platform, is the best combined of Edge and Chrome with Internet Explorer integration perfect for browsing the web, working on Office 365 and searching your cloud enterprise data via Bing Search integration for Office 365.

Check out the beta release via the Beta channel: https://www.microsoftedgeinsider.com/en-us/

Edge Beta is now also ready for Enterprises. Admins should really check out: https://www.microsoftedgeinsider.com/en-gb/enterprise.

A great feature in the new Edge is profiles, like in Chrome, that allow you to setup a collection of personas to quickly switch between different Microsoft Accounts. Very handy for Office 365 administration and Microsoft Teams, to give some examples.

The new Edge logo:

EdgeNew

 

See also this great blogpost on the setup and usage of Edge Beta including examples on the usage of the profiles feature.

Happy Surfing on the Edge!

Is it difficult to keep up with Office 365 continuous changes?

In my opinion it depends a few factors and it does not need to be difficult:

  • Your mindsets towards modern apps and cloud based working
  • Your willingness to do short periodically checkups
  • Allow users to have me time to get updated and do knowledge update

I would like today to pickup on some blogposts going around noting that Microsoft is releasing new features and apps in a high tempo creating a conflict for consultants, users, managers and admins to keep up.

So yes, this is confusing if you did not adapt your mindset, whatever role you have.

Working with Office 365 / SharePoint in the cloud is not different than working with a smartphone. Apps come and go, while updates popup like mushrooms on a sunny day after a good rain. And we decide Everytime what we like and use.

In both cases you have the choice which apps to use and which not. Realize that looking at Word or Excel, a lot of users use only a small percentage of the features, bells and whistles these programs have been offering since the beginning while others found themselves more features that enhance their productivity and use them to a greater extend. Office 365 works the same way. Only on a bit bigger scale.

Start seeing Office 365 as a whole, and find the apps that are useful for you and ignore the rest or wait till you are ready for them based on your needs.

Keep yourself informed on a weekly basis is the key here. You do not need to spend hours on this, just check what’s coming soon and is new and think about if this can improve your work of the of others

And then give it a try!

Office 365 is focussed more and more on self management. Users, managers and admins can all independently determine what works and what does not. So users should also get the chance to have personal time to update their knowledge and skills.

Try to be less rigid as an organisation and use best practice pilot initiatives to support further adoption. As I said, see Office 365 as a complete platform and as with Word itself, some users use this and some use that.

As admins we have to make the full organisations understand this are not rigid programs anymore with a single working method. This are platform solutions with freedom of work.

This does not take away the idea to streamline the general setup across an organisation and as admins we can still manage a lot of central setting. But do not block to easily everything new. Instead find early adopters and make them part of the target release program.

So check the admin portal at least once a week and find yourself those early adopters for early feedback.

Encourage users to search for work improvements what will benefit all.

For consultants to say, hold back on making manuals and PowerPoint presentations!

Keep the info focussed on the ideas and logic behind Office 365 and use more live demo examples to show what it is about. You indeed do not want to spend half your time updating your screenshots and adapting your text.

Hopes this helps any of you finding your way in going along with the updates flows of this modern times.

Testing and go with the flow

In the Collaboris Collab365 Teams Guest Group someone came with the question how to test new releases beforehand and first deploy to a test environment before activating it on a production environment.

So here it comes. Your production/live environment = your test environment. (Unless you have 2 Office365 tenants and can use 1 solely for testing)

what does this mean?

Go with the flow is what it means to be in the cloud.

So I can not test beforehand? Yes you can!

Lets see what Microsoft says about it…

“A good practice is to leave majority of users in Standard release and IT Pros and power users in Targeted release to evaluate new features and prepare teams to support business users and executives.”

Release validation rings for Office 365.

 ( from Set up the Standard or Targeted release options in Office 365)

Your Target release candidates you setup via the Office Admin Center > Settings > Organization profile > Release preferences > Actions …

  • Set Release Track to “Targeted release for selected users”
  • Set your IT pros and Power users as desired

2018-02-13 20_27_49-Targeted release for selected users

Combine this with keeping yourself up to date about what changes are coming up.

“For significant updates, Office customers are initially notified by the Office 365 public roadmap. As an update gets closer to rolling out, it is communicated through your Office 365 Message Center.” (from Set up the Standard or Targeted release options in Office 365)

When a new function or app can be shut off/disabled and I conclude its really needed due to circumstances, I prep to do so as soon as the update gets to the world wide standard release stage. (happens seldom I do so)

Mostly I just make sure to know what is needed for the available setting options and I am able to explain the new functionality to the users/organization.
What makes life easier is..

Get the organization to understand the continuous update logic of cloud applications and let them embrace it for it provides constantly new features and options to improve the daily work.

Site Collections

For the Classic SharePoint environment you can opt for the creation of dedicated Site Collections for testing, as playground and special development.
Note: You will need to consider here how you are going to move all your development work to your live collections ones your are happy with the result. For me I learned I better directly build my ideas on the place to be and regulate the audience from testing to go live simply via the permission settings.
Stay tuned for the next update 😉