TechNet's primary web presence was a collection of sites for IT professionals providing information, documentation, and discussion authored both by Microsoft and by the community at large. Later emphasis on and incorporation of applications such as forums, blogs, library annotations, and social bookmarking changed the nature of the TechNet site from a one-way information service to an open dialog between Microsoft and the IT professional community. The main website and most of its constituent applications below were available in 12 languages, generating traffic from 11.5 million per month and host approx. 11 million documents.
Library Similar to the
MSDN Library which contained technical information for software developers, the TechNet Library was a source of technical information for IT professionals and advanced users. The technical content was freely available on the web and on CDs and DVDs. The discs were published monthly and contained the complete Microsoft Knowledge Base,
service packs,
security updates,
resource kits, technical training, operations and
deployment guides,
white papers, and
case studies. In January 2014, Microsoft announced that
Microsoft Security Bulletins and Advisories would be merged into the TechNet Library. In 2016, Microsoft introduced the new technical documentation platform,
Microsoft Docs, intended as a replacement of TechNet and MSDN libraries. For the next two years Microsoft migrated their materials into Microsoft Docs. Now most of the TechNet Library pages redirect to the corresponding Microsoft Docs pages.
Forums TechNet Forums are the
web-based forums used by the community to discuss a wide variety of IT professional topics. TechNet Forums were migrated during 2008 to an all-new platform that provided new features designed to improve efficiency such as inline preview of threads,
AJAX filtering, and a slide-up post editor.
Blogs TechNet had their own blogging platform, which hosted the
blogs of Microsoft employees. In May 2020, the MSDN and TechNet blogs were closed and the content was archived at Microsoft Docs.
Wiki The TechNet Wiki is a technical resource inspired by Wikipedia. Wiki is a community site and does not offer official documentation from Microsoft. Anyone who joins the community can contribute new topics, edit and enhance existing topics, provide comments and "friend" other registered users. The goals of the wiki included providing broader and more in-depth solutions content (how-to, procedural, troubleshooting, deployment), from a broad pool of first-hand experiences, with less publishing friction than traditional mechanisms.
Other TechNet content on related topics is organized into separate sections, such as: • TechNet Evaluation Center • Microsoft Tech Companion App • Microsoft Script Center • TechNet Video
Social bookmarking Social bookmarking on TechNet Social was first launched in 2008, built on a new web platform that has
user-tagging and
feeds at its core. The goal of the social bookmarking application is to provide a method whereby members of the IT professional community can: • Contribute to a database of quality links on any topic from across the web. By filtering on one or more tags, (e.g. "Exchange" and "security") users can discover popular or recent links and subscribe to a feed of those links. • Find and follow experts' recommended sites. Each profile page includes a feed of the user's contributions. Users can be discovered through a drop-down menu on each bookmark. • Demonstrate their expertise through the links displayed in their profile. • Store their favorite links online. The initial release of the application provides standard features for the genre, including a
bookmarklet and import capabilities. The TechNet web site is also starting to incorporate feeds of social bookmarks from experts and the community, displayed alongside feeds from relevant bloggers.
Subscriptions and downloads TechNet also provided access to Microsoft software for evaluation purposes through the "TechNet subscription". The annual subscription provided trial-use-only software that was unlocked only so long as a subscription was maintained. The Standard subscription provided access to most of their software except specific enterprise-oriented software and included one collection of Microsoft E-learning. The Professional subscription was more expensive and provided access to all their software and included two free professional support calls and two collections of Microsoft E-learning. On July 1, 2013, Microsoft announced the retirement of the TechNet Subscriptions service to focus on growing its free offerings, including evaluation resources through the TechNet Evaluation Center, expert-led learning through the Microsoft Virtual Academy, and community-moderated technical support through the TechNet Forums to better meet the needs of the growing IT professional community. The last day to purchase a TechNet Subscription was August 31, 2013. Subscribers could activate purchased subscriptions through September 30, 2013. Microsoft announced an extended 90-days plan to help existing subscribers get used to the new situation. ==
TechNet Magazine ==