1,804 articles and 15,078 comments as of Friday, June 17th, 2011

The idea I came up with, was to store data in a custom List in SharePoint, and create a VBA macro that captures Calendar additions automatically, and uploads them straight to the SharePoint List.

OK, in the interest of full disclosure I am not a programmer/coder. However, I am in IT and therefore know enough code to make programmers want to bang their head against their desk repeatedly while muttering “Why? Why? Why?” under their breath.

As I created the filter, I realized a lot of new SharePoint Site Managers might not know how to use “Today” as a math function when filtering.

I’ve been working on this for a while and finally decided it doesn’t have to be absolutely perfect before letting people use it. EUSP, along with fpWeb.net, is sponsoring a SharePoint Community Calendar.

Moving a calendar list between site collections may be confusing, but it is actually very simple! This article demonstrates one method using list templates and Windows Explorer to move SharePoint Calendars fast. Don’t worry, all your content will be moved also

For those of you who have been following my progress of the SharePoint Community Calendar, I’ve got a screenshot to show you the first pass at the interface. Click the screenshot and you’ll be taken to a full sized version where you can really examine the tabs.

Christophe has updated the script to fix a couple of little glitches. You can find the updated resources at Path to SharePoint, HTML Calculated Column: minor update… and some advice.

The basic functionality within the SharePoint interface is limiting when it comes to presenting graphical information. In a set of live online, upcoming workshops, we will present ways to display information with charts, graphs, and through animations, all without recourse to the server.

Christophe Humber and I just completed the first session of “Killer SharePoint Calendar Solutions”. I hadn’t seen some of the solutions before the workshop and was floored.

Sounds like a pretty reasonable suggestion and the Calendar lists NewForm.asx already sets the Start time to the current time – shouldn’t be too hard, right?