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SharePoint 2007 How-To |  | Author: Ishai Sagi Publisher: Sams Category: Book
List Price: $29.99 Buy New: $18.63 as of 7/30/2010 04:36 CDT details You Save: $11.36 (38%)
New (28) Used (9) from $18.63
Seller: pbshop Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 23989
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Pages: 384 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.9
ISBN: 0672330504 Dewey Decimal Number: 006.78 EAN: 9780672330506 ASIN: 0672330504
Publication Date: May 15, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| • | ISBN13: 9780672330506 | | • | Condition: New | | • | Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed |
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Product Description
SharePoint® 2007 How-To Ishai Sagi Real Solutions for SharePoint Users SharePoint 2007 How-To delivers quick, to-the-point answers to common problems and tasks in SharePoint 2007. You’ll find answers to the most common end-user tasks, as well as some of the more complex problems and tasks faced by content and site managers. From the basics of navigating a site, to more complex tasks such as customizing a site and managing site security, SharePoint 2007 How-To is a focused resource that provides access to all the answers you needânow! Fast, Accurate, and Easy to Use! . Discover all the core SharePoint components and their practical uses and applications . Learn the essentials for navigating a SharePoint site . Find fresh ideas for working with the various SharePoint file formats . Perform detailed searches within SharePoint . Manage personal sites . Create organized lists and document libraries that are easy to navigate . Modify and customize list views by using filtering, grouping, and sorting . Control user access by managing permissions for lists, libraries, files, and other components . Implement and track custom workflows within SharePoint . Create subsites for enhanced content management . Customize the look and feel of a site using custom settings, themes, and content types . Manage site permissions and settings for a more secure environment Ishai Sagi is a SharePoint expert who has been working in Microsoft SharePoint since its initial release in 2001. Currently, Ishai is a SharePoint developer and solutions architect in Canberra, Australia. He spends his spare time leading the Canberra SharePoint user group. Since the Microsoft SharePoint launch in 2001, Ishai has trained numerous end users, administrators, and developers in using Microsoft SharePoint or developing solutions for the platform. He has spoken at Microsoft conferences in countries around the world, including Spain, Israel, and Australia. Ishai was the recipient of the Microsoft Most Valuable Professional (MVP) award for SharePoint in 2007, 2008, and 2009. Ishai also is the author of a popular SharePoint blog for developers at http://www.sharepoint-tips.com and manages the Canberra SharePoint User Group website at http://www.sharepointusers.org.au/Canberra/default.aspx. Category: Microsoft Servers/SharePoint User Level: Beginner–Intermediate
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
Fabulous guide to the product June 15, 2009 Steven Rose (Canberra, Australia) 18 out of 19 found this review helpful
I'm an experienced SharePoint user, trainer, developer, designer, architect (etc etc) and am quite familiar with most resources out there. With this book Ishai has achieved something very important - a clear explanation of the many screens and options available in SharePoint. For example, he makes clear what effect different options have when using the built-in survey tool, with lots of screenshots to make things crystal clear. In many ways, this is the manual many people wished Microsoft would produce - written in plain English.
On initially looking through the book I was put off by the book's structure, because it sometimes introduces difficult technical truths when we are doing something simple. However, on reflection, I understand the reasoning: the structure makes sense when you come back to the book as a reference, looking for information on particular subject. I would advise readers to skip sections that seem too detailed for them: Ishai's scenario / solution structure should help: if the scenario doesn't interest you, skip ahead!
If I read a book and then never take it down from the shelf ever again, I take that as a bad sign: I expect my needs to change over time, and to get more value out of books as time goes by. I have already had "SharePoint 2007 How-To" off the shelf a few times, which bodes well for its longevity, and hence value.
Who is it for? The material ranges from `new to product' through to briefing people who might whip up a little SharePoint application to make their work easier. But the primary audience are people I have met many times: people who need to use SharePoint and feel bewildered by all the options. You know who you are.
A Gem July 7, 2009 Steve Schapel (Wellington, New Zealand) 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
In a word - masterful. Congratulations, Ishai, on a great contribution!
The author is careful to point out that the book is not targeted to the technical end of the spectrum - the professional SharePoint developers and administrators.
Perfect! There are lots of books, and other resources, that make the assumption that you already know stuff, and jump right in to the intermediate or advanced level.
No, this is for the user. Well, in a sense, the author misses slightly here. He forgot to mention those who don't necessarily work directly with SharePoint, but work with technologies that can integrate closely with SharePoint. Like (ahem) Access developers, for example.
So really, it's for people who need a good, solid, overview understanding of SharePoint. Terminology, concepts, functionality. And in my experience, there was a big gap for this type of book, and Ishai has filled it superbly.
Here's the first sentence in Chapter 1:
"SharePoint is a platform that allows users to build websites."
That's what I like... start at the beginning, and move on up from there.
Not that it's all on the basic level. By the time we get to page 341 we've covered some pretty meaty topics.
I have learned heaps from this book, and will continue to do so as I explore it more thoroughly. Just what I needed for my present stage of SharePoint knowledge and skill.
I have no criticisms at all. It is nicely written, in a very readable style. Very well organised. Excellently illustrated. Highly recommended.
Great Introduction Book December 14, 2009 Jerry W. Odom Jr. (Baton Rouge, LA) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
As a software developer I've worked primarily with Microsoft .NET based applications over the past 4 years. I've had to do a few things for SharePoint but never really took the time to understand everything about it. Reading the contents and skimming over a few chapters I knew this book would be more for the analyst side of things but it was so easy to read I decided to go cover to cover while experimenting within our SharePoint environment. I learned a number of things I previously didn't know about and really feel I have more solid understanding thanks to this book. It's right to the point and has very relevant pictures.
If you've ever seen one of those how-to blog posts on some complicated programming procedures then you know how this book reads. Straight to the point on how to get things done. Great book.
Nice non-technical user reference January 23, 2010 Dimitri Shvorob (London, UK) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Indeed, a handy reference for a SharePoint novice with little IT background, although "Project management with SharePoint" might be even more accessible - shorter and with a focused agenda. Readers with slightly more experience will need less spoon-feeding - after seeing too many screenshots, I felt that the author was rushing me through items on SharePont screens (cf. "how-to") - and would be better served by Wrox's "Beginning SharePoint", for example.
Good for starters May 16, 2010 Ali Doruk Baykal (Turkey) This book is very useful for starters and content managers of Sharepoint system. But this book is not a reference for developers who is going to develop sharepoint sites and web parts. If you are willing to learn how to develop on sharepoint, this is not the book you are looking for.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
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