Pleasure Island and MowenWorks
The adult novelty store Pleasure Island needed to re-brand and update their online presence. MowenWorks was able to come up with a […]
The adult novelty store Pleasure Island needed to re-brand and update their online presence. MowenWorks was able to come up with a […]
The SharePoint 2011 conference this year was hosted in Anaheim, CA in early october. INPO sent 9 of us across the US […]
I’m also working on the MedFoamProducts.com welcome page. I tried to work off the medical blue color scheme so visitors get a […]
Finally have the welcome page for TacScape up and running. Im moving to get the site structure flushed out and ready for reviewing. […]
Its been a crazy month or me at work and in live. I have 2 major projects going on at work; 2 […]
I recently had a project to bring additional information to a Search Results page in SP2010. I wanted to give the user an option to edit the properties of an item straight from a search results page. So I thought it would be a good idea to add some sort of “Edit” button to the property pop-up you’d see in an item library.
Let me document exactly what I did and get back to you.
Write-up coming soon!
The MedFoamProducts website design and production is being taken on by MowenWorks. Were taking it in phases. Here’s a swatch of some proposed […]
This years TechED was different for me. Since we plan on going to Anaheim, CA in October for the SharePoint 2011 conference, I […]
There is a point in one’s Web Dev. life when a map of data is needed. Since I’m a SharePoint guy, I thought why not make one that feeds off of a SharePoint list? I did just this with a SharePoint list of Nuclear Power Plants in the US.
The map changes information based on location information. My map changes based on the URL parameters, but yours can changed based on a link that is clicked, or some other “refresh map” action.
Let me show you whats what.
One of my recent projects was to redesign (update) our internal home page with the functionality of SharePoint 2007. We use the home page to convey information to our employees about the Nuclear Industry, business news, organizational news, or other work related information.
Sure, why not. Lets pop on the page a few Content Query Web Parts (CQWP) and set the queries to pull what we need based on the business rules. *dust off hands*
But what if we need the users to know which item is “new” versus something that is much much older? We can’t have our visitors guess, we need some sort of indicator. SharePoint has that cute little icon appear next to the titles. Why isn’t this being display with my CQWP results!?
Well, let me show you how I did it for our Home Page needs.