SharePoint can be viewed in two main ways: as a host of things and as a data collection mechanism. I prefer to view it as the latter because I find that it is far more interesting and compelling that way.
Back in 2001 when SharePoint first came out, I was building web apps for Siemens and they wanted to use SharePoint. I soon found out that SharePoint was great and offered value beyond the tools I could build. I would still write custom apps and tools without SharePoint but SharePoint really took off within Siemens as a great data collection mechanism. The Team Sites feature and all of the lists and modules and such really is the core of SharePoint.
SharePoint has come a very long ways since its early beginnings and added Records Management, Web Parts, Dashboards, and a lot of Business Intelligence features.
Yet some people see SharePoint today as a surface and host for things regardless of its complexity and value. They see it as a container that doesn't do much. I don't see it as this at all and am confused by people who think of it in this way.
So get a clue people, it's a database and a holding tank of data and other things; it's a framework.
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