You can open documents in other apps and re-upload to SharePoint, and you can also edit metadata with no limitations that I could find. After choosing the lists/libraries you want the items and documents are downloaded. You are given an add site prompt, which then asks the user which lists/libraries they want to sync. What they have essentially done is port the Contributor experience to the iPad. If you’re familiar with their contributor product, you’ll be at home with the iPad app. ![]() Regardless, I’m not letting those impressions shape the review below as I am judging each on their own iOS merits. Hopefully I will use harmon.ie’s desktop product soon, but I’m just too used to Colligo’s offering. The reason I have not is because I hate Outlook getting slower than it already is, and I didn’t have a good experience with Colligo’s Outlook add-in (although I haven’t tried it recently). On the other hand, I have never used the harmon.ie desktop application. It continues to impress me, and I don’t hesitate to recommend it liberally. I have used Colligo’s Contributor project for a few years now, and I admittedly love it. I think both of these are the two best options over other apps such as SharePlus and Filamente (although Filamente isn’t bad).īefore we get started I should be up front about my familiarity with each of these companies. ![]() I thought that instead of writing separate reviews for both that I would go over the good and bad from each to contrast. I was recently provided with full versions of both Colligo’s Briefcase iPad app and harmon.ie’s universal iOS app.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |