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Scott Jamison's Information Worker Blog - Wednesday, October 11, 2006
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 Thursday, October 12, 2006

When building applications to solve a specific business need, I'm a big fan of using the 2007 Office System as a base platform.  Why?  If you're building a web application, it often takes a lot of code and will still limit user functionality. If you develop a rich UX application, it will serve the user better, but it's one more application that the user has to learn and use to get their job done.

With an application built on top of the 2007 Office System, you can do things like let the user stay in their preferred application - say Microsoft Outlook, for example.  This is an example of an Office Business Application (OBA).  OBAs are an emerging class of applications that connect users to exising LOB systems through the familiar Microsoft Office interface.

For a great example, check out the OBA Reference Architecture Pack for Supply Chain.

What do you think?

10/12/2006 12:50:09 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]   2007 Office system | Architecture  |  Trackback
 Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Thanks to everyone who attended last week's Beyond TechEd events!  Here's the full set of slides:

Core Infrastructure Optimization

Infrastructure Optimization

Best Practices for Secure Messaging

Longhorn Server

SMS and MOM Overview

Deployment in an Hour

Microsoft Office System – Business Productivity Optimization

Business Productivity Infrastructure Optimization

Office Client Overview

SharePoint Overview

2007 Office System Development

Exchange 2007

Unified Communications

Application Platform Optimization and Developer Productivity

Business Intelligence

dotNetFX 3.0

SQL Server Developer Productivity

BizTalk 2006

10/11/2006 9:12:22 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]   2007 Office system | Architecture | Business Intelligence | General | SharePoint | TechEd 2006  |  Trackback
 Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Thanks to those of you who attended the EMC/Microsoft 2007 Office System developer events!  You can download my slides here.

10/10/2006 5:09:25 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]   2007 Office system | SharePoint | InfoPath  |  Trackback
 Monday, October 02, 2006

Thanks to everyone who attended last week's Beyond TechEd events.  Here are the slides (most of them anyway...the rest will follow shortly):

2007 Office System Development

Business Intelligence

Exchange 2007

Longhorn Server

Office Client Overview

Office System Track Overview and BPIO

SharePoint Overview

SQL Server Developer Productivity

Unified Communications

10/2/2006 5:49:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]   2007 Office system | General | SharePoint | TechEd 2006  |  Trackback
 Sunday, September 24, 2006

If you're looking for a list of the OOB office icons and the names of the Ribbon tabs and buttons like I was, here's a great blog posting where you can download those items in very handy Excel files:

http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archive/2006/09/15/755336.aspx

 

9/24/2006 7:28:20 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [6]   2007 Office system  |  Trackback
 Saturday, September 23, 2006

Be sure to join me at the Beyond Tech·Ed 2006 Technical Briefing next week! This event will provide the most up-to-date information from the most requested sessions at Tech·Ed 2006, Microsoft’s premier technical conference that brings together IT Professionals & Developers to provide you with tools, and resources to build, deploy, secure, mobilize, and manage solutions across currently shipping as well as soon to release products.

 

This one-day session will consist of three technical tracks delivered by local Microsoft experts and will focus on how to put the power of Microsoft technologies and solutions to work for your business!

 

 

Where

Farmington, CT Marriot

15 Farm Springs Rd

Waltham, MA

Microsoft Office

201 Jones Road

When

Tues, Sept 26th

Thur, Sept 28th

 

9 am to 4:30 pm

Event ID

1032303973

1032303967

 

To RSVP:  Call 1-877-MSEVENT or visit http://msevents.microsoft.com/cui

 

Special giveaway for each attendee

Free copy of the TechEd 2006 conference DVD

Valued at $198

 

PRIZE DRAWING – Chance to win an XBOX 360 Note: must be present to win!

 



 

Registration desk opens at 8:30am on the day of the event. Breakfast and lunch served.

 

Please review Agenda prior to responding, as we ask you to choose your track choice


9/23/2006 5:44:13 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]   2007 Office system | General | TechEd 2006  |  Trackback
 Monday, August 21, 2006

Office 2007 provides some great new support for disconnected (offline) scenarios for working with content in SharePoint 2007.  In order to clarify when/where you’d use each of the applications that will synchronize content with SharePoint, I thought I’d create a post since I've had a number of questions on this.

 

In addition to Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Access, InfoPath, Communicator, and Publisher, Office Enterprise 2007 includes two new applications – Groove and OneNote.  Groove is a great tool for enabling teams to get work done, while Outlook is more of a personal information management tool.

 

Outlook, Groove, and Access each support varying degrees of offline sync with SharePoint, based on the strengths of that application…read on:

 

Outlook 2007:

I love Outlook cached mode. Being able to have my personal email, calendar, contacts, and tasks at my disposal whether I’m connected or not is huge for me.  In 2007, Outlook takes this a step further by synchronizing certain items from specific SharePoint lists: calendars, tasks, discussions, contacts and document libraries. This data is synchronized into Outlook using native Outlook data types (as in 2003), except now they are synchronized in two directions. For documents (new!), Outlook provides a way to take libraries (or folders) offline into that same local PST. Outlook keeps a read-only copy of the document in the PST. Even though the document is read-only, you can edit Office 2007 documents, since the client application (specifically Word 2007, Excel 2007, or PowerPoint 2007) will prompt you to “edit offline,” which automatically stores the updated document in a local drafts folder. Thus, the Office application becomes responsible for managing any conflicts due to editing on the server. What’s cool is that the applications are pretty smart, since if the document is being editing locally, the user automatically gets the latest edits, whether from the Outlook PST, SharePoint site, or from the local SharePoint drafts folder.

 

Groove 2007:

Groove 2007 will also be able to synchronize content from a WSSv3 document library.  Don't confuse this with Outlook, which is geared toward PIM-style info; Groove takes team information -- document libraries in particular. Groove provides a more extensive set of capabilities in order to fully enable team collaborative scenarios, rather than "one guy working on a document."  An example of this is that Groove provides disconnected check-in/check-out so that multiple authors working in a peer-to-peer fashion can still maintain a structured authoring experience. A common scenario will be that a team will work in a dynamic environment inside a Groove workspace and then publish the result up to a SharePoint library. Think of Groove as the best rich-client complement for SharePoint documents – say like Outlook email is to Exchange, or Communicator IM is to LCS.

 

Ok, so what about the non-PIM and non-document data in SharePoint lists?  Read on…

 

Access 2007

Remember the good old days when you could open Access, create a couple of tables, and track almost any data you can think of? The problem was, of course, where to store the .MDB file so that it could be shared and backed up properly. The good news: Access can now be bound to WSSv3 lists. This provides the rich UI of Access and the server-based benefits of WSS. In addition, Access is able to cache the list data locally, and synchronize changes back to the server, thereby providing a disconnected experience for data-centric tracking applications. Access 2007 doesn't synchronize documents from a SharePoint document library (that's what Groove is for). Its focus is on data-centric applications, including custom applications, so it can synchronize custom metadata columns from any list or library. I’d recommend considering Access for your data tracking applications going forward – you’ll get a rich UI plus the server side benefits of SharePoint like workflow, a reach UI, search, etc.

 

In short:

Outlook: Aggregate PIM and document information from SharePoint sites for personal use

Groove: Team collaboration and the richest offline team document experience

Access:  Data-centric and other “tracking” applications

 

8/21/2006 10:26:33 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [1]   2007 Office system | SharePoint  |  Trackback
 Monday, July 31, 2006

A few weeks ago, we launched a very cool contest that challenges developers around the world to design Office business applications that support non-profit organizations and encourages them to learn more about the 2007 Microsoft Office system at the same time.  I wanted to remind everyone of the contest -- it's called Develop without Borders and offers over $150,000 in prizes! 

 

The concept is simple:  Developers choose a charitable organization that they would like to help, understand the business challenges that it faces, and propose a solution based on the 2007 Office system that addresses one or more of those challenges.  The solutions that make the most impact on the organization and that best utilize the Office system technologies can win up to $50,000 to help pilot or implement the solution.

7/31/2006 11:40:38 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]   2007 Office system  |  Trackback
 Saturday, July 15, 2006

Microsoft E-learning has a free clinic on MOSS 2007:

 

Clinic 5046: Inside Look at Building and Developing Solutions with Microsoft® Office SharePoint® Server 2007

To register, go to http://www.microsoftelearning.com.  There are other free courses, too -- check them out!

7/15/2006 2:13:52 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]   2007 Office system | SharePoint  |  Trackback
 Thursday, July 06, 2006

You may have noticed that if you create a corporate intranet using Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 Beta 2, any team site that you create will lack the "Save Site As Template" link in the Site Settings admin page.  Does this mean you can't save a site as a template?  No...it just means that the link is missing.  To save the site as a template, simply navigate to the /_layouts/savetmpl.aspx page.  For example, if you have a site with a URL of http://myserver/sitedirectory/myworkspace/default.aspx, then go to http://myserver/sitedirectory/myworkspace/_layouts/savetmpl.aspx and you will get the correct "Save Site As Template" page for your site.

7/6/2006 2:47:24 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [7]   2007 Office system | SharePoint  |  Trackback
 Friday, June 23, 2006

I've been in a lot of meetings lately where customers are looking at the best way to get a big-picture view of the health of their business. Scorecards are a great way to accomplish this, and Microsoft's Business Scorecard Manager (BSM) and SharePoint Portal Server are great tools to build them with.  Mauro Cardarelli, Managing Partner at Jornata, just published a great introductory article about BSM in TechNet magazine. I love when folks make it easy to understand a new technology very quickly - Mauro does just that. Check it out here. For other BSM stuff, the BSM team also has their own blog.

6/23/2006 4:58:35 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [0]   Business Intelligence  |  Trackback
 Tuesday, June 20, 2006

I will be speaking at the New England Regional SharePoint User Group next Tuesday night (June 27) at 201 Jones Road (6th floor), Waltham, MA.  I hope to see you there!  The topic will be Introducing Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007.  I'll talk about the new capabilities of the 2007 Office system and how they enable great business solutions.

 

The New England Regional SharePoint User Group (NERSUG) meets the fourth Tuesday every other month at the Microsoft Office in Waltham.

 

 

 

6/20/2006 8:37:24 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [2]   2007 Office system | SharePoint  |  Trackback
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