MCMS Connector for SharePoint Technologies Review
Review of MCMS Connector for SharePoint Technologies.
Huen, Stephen. Code Project, The (2005). Articles>Content Management>Server Side Includes>Microsoft SharePoint
Developers as Users of SharePoint
In SharePoint, we are likely to think of developers as people who work to customise SharePoint, but there are a lot of developers out there who are simply end users of SharePoint. How do they like the system?
Technical Writer (2007). Articles>Content Management>Software>Microsoft SharePoint
A Five-Click Solution to Publishing and Uploading Screen Videos to SharePoint
The quickest video solution for uploading Jing videos to a SharePoint directory. This process requires a few minutes of setup, but once you set it up, it literally takes just five clicks to initiate, capture, and publish a video to SharePoint.
Johnson, Tom H. I'd Rather Be Writing (2009). Articles>Content Management>Microsoft SharePoint>Screen Captures
Do SharePoint Right Before SharePoint Does You Wrong
Microsoft markets SharePoint as an omnibus information-management platform, but like all software, it has meaningful strengths and weaknesses. People frequently label SharePoint a collaboration product, when in fact, it excels at some types of collaboration but virtually ignores other. SharePoint is useful for some Web Content Management scenarios, but poor at (many) others.
Byrne, Tony. CMSwatch (2009). Articles>Content Management>Software>Microsoft SharePoint
The Importance of Building a SharePoint Team
A successful team is perhaps won of the most critical aspects to a successful SharePoint project, because without the right people you can’t make it happen. The first thing to say is that building a successful team is not about hiring as many developers as possible and hope they get it all to work. In fact the place to start is not with the people who will implement the project but those who will envisage and plan the project.
Baddeley, Peter. End User SharePoint (2009). Articles>Content Management>Collaboration>Microsoft SharePoint
Get Smart With SharePoint Documents 
Given the pressures on firms to provide increased value at lower costs, it’s imperative that they find ways to reduce the costs of creating and managing documents and increase their value to clients and personnel. Microsoft SharePoint provides a range of features to make your firm’s documents “smarter,” from capturing rich metadata to automating workflows to intelligent search. As applied, these features can transform passive documents into active, reusable resources. In this article I’ll describe some of the ways that SharePoint can reduce the effort to create, manage and retrieve documents and increase their value, as smart documents, to both your firm and its clients.
Gerow, Mark. End User SharePoint (2009). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>Microsoft SharePoint
SharePoint 2010 Navigation Hierarchies and Key Filters 
The SharePoint 2010 Managed Metadata feature has been my favourite topic since coming back from the SharePoint conference. I get excited about this kind of thing because metadata is a big part of all of the software we build. But some people are probably saying "Why should we get so excited about new metadata features in SharePoint? The new UI and improved capacity are really the neat things about SharePoint 2010."
Puffer, Charlie. End User SharePoint (2009). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>Microsoft SharePoint
A SharePoint Case Study: Switching on the Right Light Bulbs 
Having seen Microsoft SharePoint in action at a central government department they could see the potential around records management and enabling the delivery of other business outcomes through ensuring the right information (records) were available to the right audience, at the right time in an appropriate manner. This meant exposing information securely to their clients, internally on their intranet and to the wider citizen audience, something their current IT platforms wouldn’t support in a simple, cost effective manner.
Clay, Ant. End User SharePoint (2009). Articles>Content Management>Microsoft SharePoint>Case Studies
SharePoint: A Case Study in Content Organization 
Many doctors across the country want to perform research and trials. As a result, there’s more than a little competition for that government funding. This is where my company and SharePoint enter the picture. The fundamental idea is that a master organization will recruit other doctors across the country and enlist those doctors’ practices in a particular research study.
Galvin, Paul. End User SharePoint (2009). Articles>Content Management>Microsoft SharePoint>Case Studies
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