My friend, and all-around SharePoint Whiz kid Marc Anderson inspired this blog post with a simple tweet “ Form, then function?
Our moderator, SharePoint guru Marc Anderson ran the session as a conversation with the audience, and the first question we received was about augmenting SharePoint’s search features with 3 rd -party products to improve adoption
These guys were uniquely capable of discussing the intricate dance going on in the overlapping worlds of Cloud Computing, Mobile ECM and the trend toward BYOD – the ‘D’, by the way, according to Marc Anderson, stands for Device, not Disaster
” I remember having this experience the first time Marc Anderson spent a couple of days with us teaching us client-side SharePoint development
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Last week, I talked about how we worked around the iPad’s inability to display Datasheet Views by using some middle-tier magic Marc Anderson got us addicted to back in June
I am using some of the techniques we learned from Marc Anderson earlier this summer
Fortunately, we spent some time earlier this summer in the tutelage of Marc Anderson , so we’re no longer afraid of DVWPs
I would argue that people in IT usually have a broader understanding of the business functions in an organization than most of their peers, but their understanding is biased toward technology. Marc Anderson recently pointed out in a blog post that “ Collaboration is about behavior, not software ” and in case you don’t realize it, information management requires collaboration as much as it enables collaboration
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I built on that thought in an article on my SharePoint Stories blog where I describe how we have decided to move a slice of our content out of SharePoint and into a less robust environment – which just happens to be exactly what our customers want us to do. Next, Marc Anderson , in an act that might prove that “ no good deed goes unpunished ” isn’t just an old saying, tagged my post on Facebook
Their skills do not have to be overly technical as programming and/or scripting are rarely involved and if they are, then this person(s) is typically working with a configuration specialist (mid-tier – thanks Marc Anderson!) or development specialist