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Forrester. Mvp. Usergroup. Stover Effect. SharePoint Solutions Help/Community. SPK - Kris Wagner. I've not been able to see the setting in my portal yet but I know it's coming soon! 25 GB's for storage up from 7GB. Good FAQ's listed at the bottom on this page. SkyDrive Pro increases storage and ease of sharing by Office 365 Team (re-posted from on August 27) Co-authors Mark Kashman (@mkashman) and Tejas Mehta (@tpmehta) are senior product managers on the SharePoint marketing team.

SkyDrive Pro is cloud storage for business. We're continually improving the SkyDrive Pro service. Each user now gets 25 GB of SkyDrive Pro storage space (up from 7 GB). Let's dive into the details! Each user now gets 25 GB of SkyDrive Pro storage space (up from 7 GB) The default SkyDrive Pro storage space in Office 365 is now 25 GB-for both new and existing customers. Let's look at what that means for the overall storage for each user. 1 In Office 365 Enterprise plans, only Office 365 Enterprise E1, E3, and E4 users contribute to the total available tenant storage.

Do more with more! Q. Q. Phill Duffy | SharePoint Glossary. Ben Curry, CISSP, SharePoint Server MVP. I fully realize this is a stab in the dark at the actual Top 25 (they are in no particular order), but it is a compilation of questions from customers, students, conferences, blogs, and emails about the SharePoint Server 2007 Best Practices book. Additionally, I am not talking about development topics, because that would a whole 'nother animal (and I am not a developer) In other words, if you disagree with them actually being the top 25, that's ok :-) Because it is impossible to list every design variable for every SharePoint Server 2007 installation, I'm basically going to explain how to find the answer for your implementation.

You will be provided with a foundation to go research each of these design questions for your environment. If you want to know more about these, come see us at the conference! I'm sure you can get your answers there. #1 - Should I migrate all of my content to SharePoint Server 2007? #2 - How large can my content databases be? #7 - Do I need records management? Bill English. In order to get SharePoint 2013 to accept the configuration of a content deployment path, there are a number of things that you need to do. If you don't do these things, when you click OK on the DeploymentPath.aspx page, you'll get this silly error "Sorry, this site hasn't been shared with you". It's an Access Denied error message. And it was written by the developer who didn't attend the "How to Write Good Error Messages" class – he or she must have been sick that day. So, I spend considerable time working around this problem in order to get it to work.

Here are the steps I took and the things I did to make it work, with links to other blog posts for you to reference. First, I took the advice of a post I can no longer find and added into the user policy permissions in Central Administration the account I had specified in the path configuration and gave it Full Control on both the source and destination web application. Let me know if you have any questions. Bill English, CEOMindsharp. Ruven’s SharePoint Blog. How a couple of books have radically changed my PowerPoint presentations. I do a fair number of presentations. I speak to our internal teams, to our clients, and to attendees at conferences. While I feel that I have pretty good content, I want to do a better job of conveying my message in a more engaging way. One of the unexpected benefits of joining Navantis is that we have a great library of books on many tech and non-tech subjects.

These books are beautifully laid out (as you would hope) and cover a number of topics on presentation planning, design and delivery. People can either listen to you talk, or they can read your slides. Notice that the essential element of point 1 doesn’t deal with rules that I’ve seen on-line like the 1-6-6 rule, which says: 1 concept per slide, max 6 bullet points, max 6 words per bullet. What I do with my decks is make them as good as I can for presenting, but I put detailed explanations, references, footnotes and links into the speaker’s notes. Zlatan's Blog [MVP SharePoint] Blog - Robert Bogue [MVP] Running your own company is sometimes challenging – in truth most entrepreneurs would say that it's almost always challenging. In some ways I feel like the challenges of a small business are very different than the challenges of large organizations. Sometimes when I'm reading management books it's hard to translate the "big company" view into one that's more appropriate for a small organization.

That struggle surfaced in my reading of The Four Disciplines of Execution – but in a slightly different way than one might expect. Strategy or Execution Most large organizations have some sort of a strategy planning cadence. They go for off-site meetings and come up with the plan for the organization over the next few years. Sometimes the focus is on the next year with only limited focus beyond that point. Some of those strategy planning retreats – as they're often called – are very effective. But is the process of creating the strategy the hard part – or is that the easy part? Translation Needed. CleverWorkarounds » Welcome.