SharePoint 2010 was built on the .NET Framework 3.5 and required a 64-bit environment, a radical departure from its 32-bit predecessors. This shift forced hardware upgrades but allowed for increased memory addressing and better performance. Unlike SharePoint 2007, which relied heavily on Internet Information Services (IIS) application pools for isolation, SharePoint 2010 introduced the , decoupling shared services (e.g., Search, Managed Metadata, User Profile) from specific web applications. This design enabled more flexible resource management and load balancing—a concept still present in modern SharePoint.
: Delivered Business Intelligence (BI) tools such as Excel Services and PerformancePoint Services to create dashboards and KPIs.
As of , SharePoint Server 2010 reached the end of its extended support period.
Users who were used to the "Ribbon" interface in Office could finally feel at home in SharePoint. Social Before It Was Cool:
Perhaps the most visible change was the introduction of the (borrowed from Office 2007/2010). This context-sensitive toolbar improved discoverability of document management actions (check-in/out, versioning, workflows) but came at the cost of screen real estate and a steeper learning curve for casual users.
Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 was a flawed but transformative product. It introduced the service application architecture, the client object model, and managed metadata—concepts that directly influenced SharePoint 2013, 2016, 2019, and even the modern SharePoint Online experience. However, its reliance on Silverlight, XSLT, and InfoPath forms has aged poorly.
. The post will now appear in the Announcements web part on your home page. Method 2: Generate a Blog Post