1,685 articles and 12,533 comments as of Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

The grammar of SharePoint consists of knowing the components of the environment: sites and subsites; lists, document libraries, and surveys; content types and site columns; list items, columns and their types; webparts, jQuery, and workflows. Grammar increases our knowledge; we are able to converse in the vocabulary of SharePoint.

Of course, you’ll need SharePoint Designer to create the workflow.

One of the most powerful means of filtering, sorting and searching information that has emerged as part of social computing is the use of “tags” to classify content of all types.

To me, SharePoint Out of the Box makes total sense and should not be dismissed.

I ran into a unique challenge on a recent project related to the use of the Quick Launch.

The IT Urgent Change process needs to be automated. It’s relatively simple and after gathering the requirements its clear that this can be accomplished using SharePoint and a SharePoint Designer workflow.

I have been reading EndUserSharePoint for several years now and have used many of the articles to solve SharePoint business requirements for my clients.

I see the question posted fairly often asking what kind SharePoint team an organization should have.

The Stump the Panel forum has some real gems buried within the hundreds of questions. I was looking at some of the responses a few days back and saw an interesting thread on fixed navigation. EvilGenius started the discussion, answered his own question and then proceeded to document his solution.

Ever wanted item level security in SharePoint without the headaches? It’s easier than you might think.