Sharepoint - News, Features, and Slideshows

News

  • Visio 2010 ups systems, Sharepoint integration

    Originally used as a visual flow diagram application, Microsoft’s Visio will receive detailed systems management and SharePoint portal integration in the upcoming 2010 release.

  • Microsoft exec: The world runs on software

    Declaring that software runs the world and developers are the engine behind software, a high-level Microsoft official Monday unleashed the company's latest software development platform, Visual Studio 2010 and the accompanying .Net Framework 4.

  • Crimtrac to overhaul extranet

    CrimTrac, the government agency that develops technology to help police solve crimes, is set to overhaul its extranet and move to the Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS) 2007 suite of software tools.

  • Why developers like SharePoint 2010

    SharePoint 2010, the newly announced upgrade to Microsoft's popular Web and collaboration platform, is receiving a thumbs-up from developers pleased with the product's capabilities, including its use of Visual Studio as a tool for building SharePoint applications.

  • Talk about IT - Microsoft SharePoint 2010

    As Microsoft SharePoint evolves beyond its server application role to become a powerful collaborative tool, does it offer enough for IT managers to get excited about?

  • Social networking success requires solid plans

    Users who shared their social networking implementation stories at the Enterprise 2.0 conference in Boston on Wednesday emphasized that success requires careful consideration of corporate culture and goals, as well as effective technology.

  • Microsoft Groove jumps onto SharePoint bandwagon

    In a belated move, Microsoft Corp. plans to turn the Groove collaboration software it acquired in 2005 -- along with its now-chief software architect Ray Ozzie -- into its main application for workers to access content stored on SharePoint servers, even while offline.

  • Microsoft's software pipeline set to burst

    If there was one revelation at this week's Microsoft TechEd conference it was that the company's product pipeline is stuffed with new software timed for release in the next seven to 12 months that will force corporate IT to deftly plan and strategize how it wants to deal with the onslaught.

[]