Who do you know who deserves their “15 Minutes” of fame?
A few months ago, I was at the dentist for my regular checkup, and had to update some of my paperwork. After 15 minutes of painstakingly filling out paper forms, I handed back the clipboard to the office manager, who spent another 15 minutes sitting and typing my information back into their patient system
The survey can be found at http://svy.mk/LWOCux it will take about 10-15 minutes to complete
After the keynote, companies such as Kodak alaris, HP, KnowledgeLake, EMC, K2 and Fujitsu presented various topics for 15 minutes each. Every hour there was a break where attendees could visit vendors and ask questions. Then there was 15 minutes where attendees would ask presenters questions
After you run the provision command in PowerShell and then start the User Profile Service Synchronization in the Central Admin UI, go ahead and wait 10-15 minutes or so before pushing forward
I go ahead and populate the first name, last name, work email. Wait about 10-15 minutes for the timer job to run and the name in welcome control (and all other places) will be the person’s name and not their account
The hospital managed to lower the time taken to locate a policy to 30 seconds from 15 minutes. http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Microsoft-Office-Communications-Server-2007-R2/IMC-University-of-Applied-Sciences-Krems/University-Improves-Education-and-Administration-Processes-with-Productivity-Solution/4000010080 Configuration of Managed Metadata The Managed Metadata Service in SharePoint allows a set of global terms to be configured in a hierarchy to be used throughout the farm
Our grandparents probably still remember having to go through an operator to make any call, and sometimes wait for 15 minutes before being connected to their cousin on the other end of the planet
According to a recent survey by Forrester Research, close to 40% of US information workers, used their tablet or smartphone for more than 15 minutes a day for work in 2011
First off, thanks again to everyone for joining yesterday's tweetjam. Lots of great conversation and ideas flying around. I'm going to quickly summarize a few of the common threads (think Clifnotes). The complete transcript of the jam follows. It's a LOT to digest, but well worth the...