The overriding problem is that Microsoft seemed to care more about the marketing of SharePoint that it's use. They knew they couldn't make SharePoint do everything well so they decided to make it do everything 1/2 assed. Wikis, Blogs, Language support with variations sound great - until you actually try to use them.
Alot of things are just too buggy or simply don’t work well enough out of the box. To get a content query web part to recognize a list of links, I have to export it to my machine, change some property I can only see in the xml, re-import it and drag it onto the page? SharePoint is complicated enough and already destined for complexity, but because it was shipped before it was QAed in any kind of real use scenario it's far too easy to just explode into a useless mess.
Another overriding problem with SharePoint is getting data out of it. To aggregate data from SharePoint sites I either have to use a bizarre xslt model with content query web parts or list my sources individually with an kludgey data view web part. The architecture around content types is great, if they are actually implemented properly, but I wish I could use that data more easily. Starting to think that maybe I should auto generate sql views on the backend...
Of course the development model. I have to develop on a server? Really?
I just wish Microsoft would have focused more on the core of the product, QAed it properly, and given everyone a solid foundation to work on with good documentation. Maybe they could have partnered with 3rd parties to get all the little bells an whistles in this version if they felt they had to. I sincerely hope that MS does not continue to plop on use-less features in the next version and instead tries to firm up the foundation. It's not just the product that suffers, it's the legecy of messy implemenation that get created.
SharePoint is very promising and I hope it does become the shinning hub of Microsofts app platform, but It will have to become alot clearer and cleaner before it does.