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His session was done in Arabic, so making it available now is a good warmup for SharePoint Saturday Arabia, coming on March 27, 2010. Also included for download is Marwan Tarek’s session on SharePoint 2010.

The EUSP Live Twitter Tracker and three channels for live blogging have been activated. You can follow all of the action from the sessions by choosing one or all of the panels to view.
The EUSP Live Twitter Tracker picks up all tweets that include the #SPTechCon hash.
There are three live blogging channels to [...]

I was having difficulty getting access to the recordings. When Michael heard, he jumped in, found the recordings and moved them up to public access on the SPSEMEA site.

In this article I will outline how SPSEMEA came about, what it took to plan the event, what happened during the event, a post mortem to talk about what could have been better and a look down the road to what will be coming.

The first session starts at 8:00am GMT (London). Joel Oleson and I will do the intros together and then present a short keynote talk to get everthing started. Everyone should login for the first session of the day. That’s when we’ll give instructions on how the day will work and how to attend the sessions.

There will be three (3) simultaneous sessions running each hour. I have created three instances of Live Meeting, calling each instance a “Channel”. The schedule for each Channel will be posted a little later today on EndUserSharePoint.com, on the registration page and on SharePointSaturday.org/emea. Participants will choose a channel each hour. They are welcome to switch back and forth between channels.

This Saturday’s SharePoint Saturday Philly was an outstanding success. If you haven’t taken advantage of a SharePoint Saturday event near you, you’re really missing out.

This code is nothing new to the wonderful people who help support EndUserSharePoint by attending our online workshops. But if you haven’t had a chance to attend the online workshop, this example code replaces the AOP LoadTip example.

I’m going to continue from yesterday’s overview with a drilldown of how I created a customized list to handle the display of external video content. The problem we are trying to resolve is how to manage access to external video content that is not stored in SharePoint.

One of the difficulties of putting on a global virtual event is trying to keep track of the various times zones: when do things start, when are specific sessions supposed to happen, what time are the breaks.