Woody Windischman

Mar-232010

New SharePoint Designer Book

Wrox in the Worx (uh, Works...)

If you've been following my tweets lately, you'll have noticed me mentioning writing a few times. I'm pleased to announce that, in cooperation with my co-authors Asif Rehmani and Bryan Philips, I'm working on a new SharePoint Designer book. Like our previous book, it will be a Wrox title. In this case, however, it will be "Beginning SharePoint Designer 2010".

This change in series, from Professional to Beginning, means that it will include a bit more basic information, and more hands-on examples; but that doesn't mean it will be any less comprehensive. We'll still be covering workflows, site and page design, governance, and all of the other things that make SharePoint Designer 2010 a great tool, not only for graphics folks, but information workers as well!

I also want to emphasize that this will not make the older book, Professional SharePoint Designer 2007, obsolete. If you are still working with a SharePoint 2007 or WSS 3.0 site, or web sites based on FrontPage extensions or other non-SharePoint web technology, then SPD 2007 is still the tool for you. SharePoint Designer 2010 will only work with SharePoint 2010 servers.

Oh, Speaking of SharePoint 2007, I'm almost done with my next major post, wherein I'll be discussing the ins and outs of email enabling SharePoint lists. You won't want to miss it!


Mar-72010

It's a Date!

MCj04260900000[1]SharePoint and Office 2010 to Launch on May 12th

On Friday, Arpan Shah announced the official debut date for Microsoft Office 2010 and, of course SharePoint 2010, on the Microsoft SharePoint Blog. In the same post, he mentioned that the RTM (Release to Manufacturing) will come a few weeks earlier, some time in April.

There are a lot of changes coming in the new versions, so there is also lots of planning to do. I know many of you are planning to move forward aggressively, while many of you will also be on older versions of SharePoint long into the future. Whichever path you choose, it might be helpful to keep the following in mind:

  • Your current stuff will still work, even once the new software comes out. You don't "need" to upgrade immediately.
  • SharePoint Server 2010 requires Windows Server 2008. It also requires that your entire stack, including both Windows Server and SQL Server, be 64-bit.
  • Although you will always get the best results when keeping both the Office client and SharePoint versions in sync, you will still get reasonable functionality with staged upgrades. (Look for information about just how the different version combinations interact soon.)
  • One exception to the previous statement is SharePoint Designer. SharePoint Designer 2007 will not work for SharePoint 2010 sites. Conversely, SharePoint Designer 2010 will not work with anything except SharePoint 2010 sites.
  • On the Office client side, even if you are using 64-bit Windows, you can still use the 32-bit Office. This is critical, because you cannot mix and match 32 and 64 bit versions of Office on the same system. Naturally, you can't use 64-bit Office on 32-bit Windows in any case.
  • No matter what version of SharePoint you are on, a failure to plan is a plan to fail. Think about how you want to use SharePoint in your company before you deploy it.

This is going to be an exciting Spring in the SharePoint world, and I can't wait to help you make sense of it!