Thanks for attending our session at SharePoint Saturday New England, sponsored in part by BlueMetal!
You can download the slide deck here and demo code here.
Pre-Session Playlist
- Phantoms - Just a Feeling (featuring Vérité)
Thanks for attending our session at SharePoint Saturday New England, sponsored in part by BlueMetal!
You can download the slide deck here and demo code here.
Posted at 03:24 PM in Hybrid, Information Architecture, Office 365, PowerShell, Presentations, SharePoint, SPS Events | Permalink | Comments (0)
Thanks for attending my session at SharePoint Saturday New England, sponsored in part by BlueMetal!
You can download the slide deck here.
Posted at 03:12 PM in Enterprise Content Management, Information Architecture, Office 365, Presentations, SharePoint, SPS Events | Permalink | Comments (0)
Thanks for attending our session at SharePoint Saturday New York City!
You can download the slide deck here and demo code here.
Posted at 12:10 PM in Hybrid, Information Architecture, Navigation, Office 365, PowerShell, Presentations, SharePoint, SPS Events, Workflow | Permalink | Comments (0)
Thanks for attending my presentation at this month's Granite State SharePoint User Group meeting!
You can download the slide deck here.
Posted at 01:00 PM in Enterprise Content Management, Office 365, Presentations, SharePoint | Permalink | Comments (0)
With SharePoint Feature Pack 1 (November 2016 Public Update), Microsoft has addressed a key shortcoming in maintaining enterprise managed metadata across SharePoint Online in Office 365 and an on-premises environment. In preview, this feature allows one to now be able to implement a taxonomy across SharePoint Server 2016 (or SharePoint Server 2013) and SharePoint Online. Enterprise content managers... rejoice!
With the availability of this capability, an administrator can now either:
then have them replicated daily in a read-only state back to SharePoint Server. This means that you can create your 'master taxonomy' from your existing taxonomies while maintaining the GUIDs of the terms, term sets, and term groups.
While this is a huge step in being able to maintain a comprehensive enterprise information architecture in a hybrid SharePoint configuration, what is still lacking here is a master Content Type Hub where content types could be published in SharePoint Online and be subscribed to both from there and from SharePoint Server. This would complete the paradigm for managing content types and site columns that potentially map to those term sets that would now available universally with this new unified taxonomy.
Read more about how to set up this capability here.
Posted at 02:42 PM in Enterprise Content Management, Hybrid, Information Architecture, Office 365, SharePoint | Permalink | Comments (0)
Thanks for attending my session at Collab365 Global Conference!
You can download the slide deck here.
Posted at 10:46 AM in Enterprise Content Management, Office 365, Presentations, SharePoint | Permalink | Comments (0)
Microsoft has released guidance on how tenant and site administrators can enable and disable the new SharePoint document library experience for users. See this article:
Switch the default for document libraries from new or classic
Using this method, I was successfully able to alter the user's experience, but here is a caveat... When you alter the setting in the SharePoint Admin Center:
the effect is not immediately apparent. There is a delay between when you make the change (to either choice) before a user will notice. SharePoint Online must be going through programmatically and changing settings at a library level. For my test, I only have one site with one document library in it in the entire tenant, and it took between 30 and 60 minutes to update.
Also I noticed that Microsoft is calling this setting SharePoint Lists and Libraries Experience, even though the settings provided are only exposed for libraries, not lists. Is more change to come to our list views?
Posted at 12:33 PM in Office 365, SharePoint, User Experience | Permalink | Comments (4)
If you noticed this graphic in one of your Office 365 site libraries recently, your tenant has had the new SharePoint document library experience enabled. This is the way document libraries are to appear going forward in SharePoint Online as well as in the upcoming release of SharePoint 2016.
As I understand it, if a user clicks Check it out on this graphic, they will experience the new way of displaying document libraries while another user will not until they click as well.
The user interface is much like that of OneDrive/OneDrive for Business. Microsoft's description of the new capability is as follows:
You may notice a change in the look and navigation of your document libraries. This new experience is faster, has additional phone and tablet features, and simpler navigation.
Note that major changes with this capability include:
Here are some key notes about this new capability:
If you open up the ECB (edit control block) for a document, you will no longer see a preview of the document and the field that contains the link; it appears with a longer list of options including Pin which will stick a small preview of the document at the top of the library's view.
If you click the ellipsis to the right of the column headers, you can now directly change the columns that are displayed in that view and their order.
Clicking on the information icon will expand the properties pane from the right side of the browser to either show you recent activity within the library, or if a document is currently selected, properties and a preview of that document.
The New button will give you a list of Office document types or Folder to choose from and, interestingly, the Link option. If you are familiar with the Link to a Document content type, this allows you to store a URL to something within a library instead of an actual physical file. If you click on the Link option, SharePoint Online will ask you to input the URL and automatically enable the Link to a Document content type within the library--something that one would have had to do manually before. If you already have the management of content types enabled within the library, the list of Office document types will be replaced by your library's enabled content types. Folder and Link will continue to be displayed even if you turn off folders in Advanced Settings within the Library Settings. It does not immediately appear to me that there is a way to disable the Link option, and it is obvious that the new interface does not respect the existing folders setting within the library.
Views for the library are presented in new drop-down menu along with the List and View in File Explorer options. Interestingly here, one would think that the latter would immediately open up a Windows Explorer window to browse the library. This is not the behavior--instead, a new browser tab is opened with the classic SharePoint list experience and THEN the Windows Explorer window appears.
To get to the library's settings page, use the settings icon in the Office 365 header.
At any point, use the lower left link in the site contents navigation pane to return to the classic SharePoint list experience.
Clicking on a document set in a library will also inevitably bring you back to the classic experience--the document set welcome page has not been integrated yet.
Note: Not all Office 365 tenants have had this capability enabled yet. Yours may not have had this particular update enabled yet.
Posted at 04:28 PM in Office 365, SharePoint, User Experience | Permalink | Comments (1)
Thanks for attending my session at SharePoint Saturday New Hampshire, sponsored in part by BlueMetal!
You can download the slide deck here.
Posted at 02:52 PM in Enterprise Content Management, Office 365, Presentations, SharePoint, SPS Events | Permalink | Comments (0)
Thanks for attending my session at SharePoint Saturday Connecticut, sponsored in part by BlueMetal!
You can download the slide deck here.
Posted at 12:10 PM in Information Architecture, Office 365, Presentations, SharePoint, SPS Events | Permalink | Comments (1)