1,804 articles and 15,031 comments as of Tuesday, June 14th, 2011

The new document centre feature of SharePoint 2010 enables documents to be filtered and searched by Meta Tags that are associated with those documents.

How would you answer this question? What are the real reasons to use SharePoint to build this solution?

SharePoint 2010 has made great strides in terms of design and accessibility, which makes your job as a “SharePoint Designer” much easier.

The out of the box available User Tasks Web Part allows you to show tasks assigned to the current user. This Web Part is a great building block for end users since it doesn’t require any configuration whatsoever.

Someone recently said via Twitter “If you aren’t using Easy Tabs, you are missing out!” I totally agree, best feature I can think of to expand my Sharepoint solutions.

Do you have a SharePoint site with multiple lists with common columns that are associated with each other?

In this segment, I’ll document how I created a basic respository to hold the maps. Then, in the next installment, I’ll demonstrate how to integrate the SharePoint Map Repository into a training tracker in SharePoint.

In the Enterprise version of SharePoint 2007, there is a set of handy out-of-box filter web parts. In this screencast, Laura Rogers will demonstrate the Query String (URL) Filter Web Part in its simplest form

I sent out a link to the SharePoint World Cup Template demo site I created from Andy Dale’s framework template. I tweaked it a little with some widgets to make it a little less geeky.

The Content Query Web Part (CQWP) is a pretty powerful beast. It allows you to do multiple site queries and aggregate the results.