Quite being so damn polite! Tell us what you really want and stick to it. Everyone will be better off for it.
Well, better late than never, as I’m too fond of saying. In this series, you’ve seen how you can use some DVWPs, jQuery (and simple JavaScript), and the SharePoint Web Services to build a pretty slick and complex application.
As we go through the series you’ll see how we can easily apply Records Management policies to any type of content within SharePoint 2010 which is extremely powerful!
However we will be specifically concentrating on new functionality in SharePoint 2010 and defining our Content Types with Records Management in mind.
Prior to to Sharepoint I had never heard of a shared drive or even seen a folder structure so I took to metadata (column tagging) organization right from the start.
Following on the theme of common sense, I’d like to provide some additional guidance and best practices around jumpstarting your SharePoint governance.
When setting up your new SharePoint environment, one of the questions you’ll need to answer is centralized or de-centralized?
The answer is to roll out social computing tools within SharePoint to improve search and provide additional methods for surfacing data within your environment.
I’m not sure how to handle this type of comment, it’s so off on so many different levels. Is it really a SharePoint problem being described here?
If you have issues with long file names in your SharePoint environment, then you probably have deeper issues with your Information Architecture.