1,804 articles and 14,399 comments as of Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

It was about a year later that I started to read about all the complaints and supposed inadequacies of the Sharepoint wiki

To get a SharePoint template that fits your processes perfectly you are going to have to make your own – and thankfully it’s exceptionally easy to do – so here’s how.

Here are 8 ways companies can extend SharePoint’s out-of-the-box capabilities to better fit their social computing vision.

Nearly everything I write about for EndUserSharePoint.com involves SharePoint Designer. In fact, a substantial amount of this site’s content, maybe even a majority, speaks to end users on how to leverage SharePoint Designer to solve business problems. And now that SharePoint Designer is free, it’s easy for everyone to get their hands on it.

During the live online workshops, I’ve been showing people how to use an HTML template to place a wrapper around wiki content to constrain the horizontal width and provide a master menu. Peter Allen from Bits of SharePoint ran with the idea and created a No Deployment Solution that any site manager or site collection manager with access to the Masterpage can implement.

SharePoint’s wiki features are a bit like Rodney Dangerfield – they “don’t get no respect”. Yet, while on their own they may not be best-of-breed in the wiki world, they are still quite useful. In addition, they do something no other wiki system does, they bring the rest of SharePoint, with all of its power and flexibility, along for the ride.

The SharePointDevWiki.com was founded by Jeremy Thake in December 2008. The idea behind it was to offer a collaborative way for SharePoint Developers to share their knowledge.

Learning about blogs and wikis is the next logical step in an End User’s transition from basic user to Power User. In this session, we’ll take a deep dive into the use of blogs and wikis for documentation, journals, meeting minutes, policies and procedures documentation, and other uses as needed by the participants.

I love the way this guy writes… he makes it look so easy.
Woody has just posted an article on how to create an ‘F1′ sensitive help system in SharePoint. The idea is to create a Wiki with various pages for help. Nothing new there. The kicker is, he shows a very simple way to activate [...]

What’s an RSS Feed and why should I care? You want me to twitter you… isn’t that against the law to do in public? Wiki, blog, social bookmarking, phishing… what the hell is all this stuff.
CommonCraft, Explanations in Plain English is a tremendous resource if you are trying to wrap your head around some of [...]