Visual Studio Projects on a Windows 2003 Server Running SharePoint (MOSS)

If you try to create a new .NET Web project (ASP .NET Web Application or ASP .NET Web Service) on a server running MOSS (or, presumably, SharePoint v2), you will get the error: ‘Unable to create Web Project ‘WebApplication1’. The file ‘c:\inetpub\wwwroot\WebApplication1’ does not correspond to the URL ‘http://localhost/WebApplication1’ where WebApplication1 is the name of…

Mission-Critical SharePoint (MOSS) Implementation for HawaiianAir.com

Check out this blog post about the development of the Hawaiian Air Web site on MOSS from the Microsoft SharePoint Products and Technologies Team Blog. If MOSS can support a mission-critical site like this, with highly specialized branding, e-commerce, dev/test/prod environments, etc., what can’t it do??? Technorati tags: MOSS, SharePoint, mission-critical

Microsoft Best Practices Analyzer for Microsoft® Windows® SharePoint® Services 3.0 and the 2007 Microsoft® Office System” Has Shipped!

I admit that since it’s just shipped, I haven’t taken a look.  However, the possibilities are intriguing.  Between analyzing site performance, scalability, and uptime using this new tool and doing analysis on the search logs to optimize search hits and best bets, SharePoint site collections are becoming more powerful than much of the competition for community…

Showing Document Icons in the SharePoint Data View Web Part

When you use the Data View Web Part in SharePoint to display documents in a document library, the "File Type" field that is available is text (doc, pdf, gif, etc.) rather than an icon.  You’d really rather display the icon instead to be consistent with other document library views.  Here’s how you can make that…

Windows SharePoint Services 2003 “Master Page” (Part 2)

I posted earlier about editing the default.aspx file in the C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\web server extensions\60\TEMPLATE\1033\MPS directory to apply branding to your SharePoint 2003 sites.  I was focused on meeting sites at the time.  Today I realized that each of the directories under C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\web server extensions\60\TEMPLATE\1033\ contains a default.aspx for a different…