Microsoft recommends that users add a bookmarklet to their browser’s favorites and use that to apply SharePoint 2010 social tags to MOSS 2007 content
Which is one of the reasons why I’ve strongly objected to MOSS 2007 Records Center as a viable storage option for records. Thanks to excellent, hard working optimists like Don Leuders, we understand why the Records Center in MOSS 2007 is inadequate-but-better-than-nothing
Considering the heavy dependence on documentation even under the guise of influence, review the MOSS 2007 governance plan carefully...Once questions are answered, craft a paragraph or two to address these concerns and commit to them in the MOSS 2007 governance plan
Until the advent of MOSS 2007, the electronic records implementation elephant-in-the-room was that mostly Records Management departments only use their own Records software...I think MOSS 2007 helped bring IT closer to Records
If you are implementing MOSS 2007 or SharePoint 2010, treat yourself...Part III: Migrating , or how to prepare your MOSS 2007 environment for a SharePoint 2010 migration, concludes the book with strong commentary on lessons learned
While the MOSS 2007 governance plan encourages a rash of My Sites from the bottom up, divisional and corporate portals from the top down should still be guided by the team…strange—the trust is in a Reagonomics approach to managing content of a few select, high-profile pieces that will trickle down to the individual users
Next time I’m going to break down the types of software debt against a MOSS 2007 to SharePoint 2010 migration
Or am I wasting my time with my SharePoint 2010 deployment or upgrade from MOSS 2007?
Oleson & Wagner’s template on MOSS 2007 includes two sections on policies: operational and application usage
EBS has enabled some sophisticated Records Management solutions to be integrated with SharePoint I originally thought that using EBS behind the MOSS 2007 Records Center would be a valuable use case