Synchronizing list data by using the Open with Access command

You can synchronize the data in a SharePoint list with Access 2010 by using the Open with Access command in the list ribbon. This command creates an Access table linked to the SharePoint list, and a supplementary UserInfo table that contains additional information, such as user names, accounts, and e-mail addresses.

Each time you open the SharePoint list or Access linked table, you see the latest data. As the SharePoint list continues to be updated, you can also manually refresh the Access linked table with the latest list changes. As the Access linked table continues to be updated, you can also manually refresh the SharePoint list data with the latest Access changes.

Synchronizing list data by using the Track this List command in Datasheet view
You can also synchronize a SharePoint list from Datasheet view by using the Track this List command available in the Datasheet view Task Pane, which also creates a linked table in Access. Using additional commands in the Task Pane, you can also synchronize the list data and do the following:

Report with Access.
Export to Access.

Synchronizing list data by using the SharePoint List command from Access
From Access 2010, you can also link a table to an existing SharePoint List by using the SharePoint List command in the Import & Link group on the External Data tab.

You can also create an empty SharePoint list from Access. In the ribbon, on the Create Tab, in the Tables group, click SharePoint lists, and then click one of the following: Contacts, Tasks, Issues, Events, or Custom.

Advantages of linking an Access table to a SharePoint list
Whichever way you choose to synchronize a SharePoint list, Access 2010 creates a linked table that reflects the structure and contents of the SharePoint list. Access selects the right data type for each field that corresponds to the list column. These linked tables then act like any Access table, and so you can also create queries, forms, reports, macros, or code to work with the data in Access 2010.

Lookup data
Access also automatically creates linked tables for all lookup lists (unless the lookup lists are already linked to the database). If the lookup lists contain columns that look up other lists, those lists are also included in the linking operation, so that the lookup list of every linked table has a corresponding linked table in the database. Access also creates relationships between these linked tables.

Structural changes
As is the case with other types of linked tables, you cannot add, delete, or modify the fields in a linked table while working in Access. If you want to make structural changes, such as removing or changing a column, you must open the list on the SharePoint site. From Access you can get to the SharePoint List settings page to change the list structure. Right-click the Access table in the Navigation Pane, point to More Options, and then click Modify Columns and Settings.

Performance
Because the data from linked SharePoint lists is automatically synchronized with local tables and users always work against local data, the performance of a linked Access table has been improved, compared to versions prior to Access 2010.

Taking data offline and resolving conflicts
If you need to take some work home with you or on the road, you can take your linked SharePoint lists offline by using Access 2010. For example, you may want to provide a parts catalog to a client while you are on the road. You can work on your data in Access 2010 and then synchronize your changes when you reconnect with the SharePoint site at a later time.

If conflicts occur — for example, if someone else updates the same record on the server or while that person also is working offline — you can resolve the conflict when you come back online by using the Resolve Conflicts dialog box. This dialog box displays information about the conflict, such as why the error occurred, and provides options for you to try to submit the data again or to discard your changes. If there are multiple errors, you can view the details of each error by clicking the Previous and Next buttons in the dialog box. Some errors can be resolved only by discarding your changes.

Tracking versions

To help your team be more productive, there are several ways that you can manage and extend content in lists, libraries, and sites. Some features help your team to find and work more efficiently with information. Other features help you manage the access to the information.

Navigating to content
Navigation elements help people to browse through the content that they need. Two navigation items that you can customize are the top link bar and the Quick Launch.

By using the settings pages for each list or library, you can choose which lists and libraries appear on the Quick Launch. You can also change the order of links, add or delete links, and add or delete the sections into which the links are organized. For example, if you have too many lists in the List section, you can add a new section for Tasks Lists where you can include links to your tasks lists. You can make all of these changes to the Quick Launch from within a browser that is compatible with SharePoint Server 2010. You can even add links to pages outside the site.

Overview of SharePoint Foundation and SharePoint Server
SharePoint Server 2010 also enables participation anywhere by offering a rich SharePoint Workspace experience while online or disconnected from your network and freeing users to collaborate on the go.

Enterprise Content Management
Enterprise Content Management (ECM) from Microsoft helps organizations overcome the challenges posed by large volumes of unmanaged content. SharePoint Server 2010 is a central part of the Microsoft ECM solution, which extends content management to every employee in an organization through integration with familiar tools such as the Microsoft Office system. The Microsoft ECM solution provides capabilities for managing the entire life cycle of content — from creation, to editing and collaboration, to expiration — on a single unified platform.

SharePoint Server 2010 helps organizations manage the entire life cycle of content by providing distinct sets of features that enable organizations to achieve the following goals:

Manage diverse content    The document management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 help organizations consolidate diverse content from multiple locations into a centrally managed repository with consistent categorization. The new document sets feature enables your organization to create and manage work products that span multiple documents. Integrated search capabilities help people find, share, and use this information. Metadata management capabilities such as the new Term Store feature can help organizations to centrally manage metadata across sites. Metadata is information about data that is used to help identify, structure, discover, and manage information. New support for metadata-driven navigation, and the ability to embed metadata fields in documents improves information search and discovery. Content can also be protected from unauthorized access. Collaboration tools, such as workflow, help people work better together to create, review, and approve documents in a structured way.
Satisfy compliance and legal requirements    The records management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable organizations to store and protect business records, either in-place next to in-progress records or in a locked down central repository. Organizations can apply expiration policies to records to ensure that they are retained for the appropriate time period to comply with regulations or corporate business policies, thereby mitigating legal risk to the organization. Audit trails provide proof to internal and external auditors that records were retained appropriately. Holds can be placed upon specific records under legal discovery to prevent their destruction.
Efficiently manage multiple Web sites    The Web content management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable people to publish Web content with an easy-to-use content authoring tool and a built-in approval process. Employees can upload content — including images, audio, and video — to Web sites in a timely manner without extensive support from IT staff. New support for rich media includes a new Asset Library, with rich views and pickers; support for videos as a SharePoint content type; a streaming video infrastructure, and a skinable Silverlight media player. Templates in the form of master pages and page layouts enable organizations to apply consistent branding to pages. Built-in Web analytics features provide support for Traffic, Search, and Inventory analytics reports. SharePoint Server 2010 also offers a single deployment and management infrastructure for intranet, extranet, and Internet sites, as well as for multilingual sites.
Enterprise search
SharePoint Server 2010 delivers a powerful search infrastructure that complements other business productivity capabilities such Enterprise Content Management and collaboration to help people get better answers faster and amplify the impact of knowledge and expertise.

Search takes into account your personal context and helps you refine your search by using interactive navigation to guide you to the information you need. SharePoint Server extends the reach of search across more content sources and content types to connect to all the information in your enterprise — including enterprise applications such as SAP, Siebel, or custom databases — and make the information available to the people who need it.

Business intelligence
Business intelligence is a set of methodologies, technology, and processes that takes information stored in organizational systems and makes it actionable by putting it into the hands of the people who need it most so that they can make informed decisions. As a key part of the Microsoft business intelligence platform, SharePoint Server 2010 can help extend business intelligence capabilities to everyone within an organization, so that everyone is able to access the right data to make the right decisions.

Your organization probably stores data in a variety of formats, such as databases, e-mail messages, and spreadsheet files. SharePoint Server 2010 helps you extract data from a variety of sources and present that data in ways that facilitate analysis and decision making.

Excel Services empowers decision makers to publish, share, and manage Excel workbooks on a SharePoint site. Other people in the organization can then modify cell values, formulas, and formatting from the browser as they analyze the data.

PerformancePoint Services in SharePoint Server 2010 can increase visibility into key organizational objectives and metrics, and enable richer depth of analysis and insight. You or others in your organization can create and use interactive dashboards with scorecards, reports, and filters to find trends. You can also add rich charts to your SharePoint sites and connect the charts to data from a variety of sources, such as SharePoint lists, external data lists, Business Data Connectivity Services, Excel Services, or other Web Parts.

Portals
With SharePoint Server 2010, organizations can build and maintain portal sites for every aspect of their business (enterprise intranet portals, corporate Internet Web sites, and divisional portal sites). Enterprise intranet and divisional portals can connect individual sites across an organization and consolidate access to existing business applications. Teams and individuals in an organization can use a portal site to access the expertise, information, and business applications that they need in order to do their jobs.

Individuals within an organization who use a portal site can take advantage of their My Site sites. A My Site is a personal site that gives you a central location to manage and store your documents, content, links, and contacts. My Site serves as a point of contact for other users in your organization to find information about you, your skills, and your interests. My Sites include the social computing features mentioned earlier in this article.

SharePoint Server 2010 also includes features that organizations can use to personalize the experience of a portal site for individual users, such as targeting content to specific types of users. Your organization can further customize the portal site by using a SharePoint-compatible Web design program such as SharePoint Server 2010.

Business process and forms
SharePoint Server 2010 provides many features that can help you integrate and streamline your business processes. Workflows can streamline the cost of coordinating common business processes, such as project approval or document review, by managing and tracking the tasks involved with those processes. SharePoint Server 2010 has several predefined workflows that you can use as they are or customize to suit your needs. You can also use SharePoint Designer to create custom workflows that support your unique business processes.

Buttons on the ribbon may be grayed out for any of the following reasons:

The action is not applicable or it depends on some other action. For example, you must select the check box for a document before you can check it out.
You do not have permission to complete the task.
The feature is not enabled for the site. For example, workflows may not be enabled on the site.
You can also save files to a library from some client programs that are compatible with SharePoint Server. For example, you can save a Microsoft Word document to a library on a SharePoint site while you work in Word.

To add an item to a list or a file to a library, you must have permission to contribute to the list or library. For more information about how your organization uses permissions and permission levels, ask your site owner or administrator.
When you add the item or file, other people who have permission to read the list can view the item or file, unless it requires approval. If the item or file requires approval, then it is stored in a pending state in the list or library, until someone with the appropriate permissions approves it. If you are already viewing the list or library when an item or file is added, you may need to refresh your browser to see the new item or file.

Lists and libraries can also take advantage of e-mail features, if incoming or outgoing mail is enabled on your site. Some lists, such as calendars, announcements, blogs, and discussion boards, can be set up so that people can add content to them by sending e-mail. Other lists, such as tasks and issue-tracking lists, can be set up to send e-mail to people when items are assigned to them.

In addition to adding content to existing lists and libraries, you may have permission to create new lists and libraries. The list and library templates give you a head start. Depending on your permission level, you can also create and customize new pages and sites.

Lists
Although there are different types of lists, the procedure for adding items to them is similar, so you don't need to learn several new techniques to work with different types of lists. A list item contains text in a series of columns, but some lists may allow attachments to be added to the item.

Add an item to a list
1.In the list where you want to add the item, click the Items tab on the ribbon. (It's the Events tab for a calendar.)
2.Click New Item (New Event for a calendar).
 Tip   Another quick way to add an event to a calendar is to point to the date on the calendar, and then click Add.

3.Complete the required fields and any others that you want to complete.
4.Click Save.
Edit or delete an item in a list
1.Point to an item and then select the check box that appears next to the item.
Your list or library may be set up to track versions, so that you can restore a previous version if you make a mistake and view a version history of the changes. When versions are tracked, revisions to the items or files and their properties are stored. This enables you to better manage content as it is revised and even to restore a previous version if you make a mistake in the current version. Versioning is especially helpful when several people work together on projects or when information goes through several stages of development and review.

SharePoint Server 2010 helps organizations manage the entire life cycle of content by providing distinct sets of features that enable organizations to achieve the following goals:

Manage diverse content    The document management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 help organizations consolidate diverse content from multiple locations into a centrally managed repository with consistent categorization. The new document sets feature enables your organization to create and manage work products that span multiple documents. Integrated search capabilities help people find, share, and use this information. Metadata management capabilities such as the new Term Store feature can help organizations to centrally manage metadata across sites. Metadata is information about data that is used to help identify, structure, discover, and manage information. New support for metadata-driven navigation, and the ability to embed metadata fields in documents improves information search and discovery. Content can also be protected from unauthorized access. Collaboration tools, such as workflow, help people work better together to create, review, and approve documents in a structured way.

Satisfy compliance and legal requirements    The records management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable organizations to store and protect business records, either in-place next to in-progress records or in a locked down central repository. Organizations can apply expiration policies to records to ensure that they are retained for the appropriate time period to comply with regulations or corporate business policies, thereby mitigating legal risk to the organization. Audit trails provide proof to internal and external auditors that records were retained appropriately. Holds can be placed upon specific records under legal discovery to prevent their destruction.

Efficiently manage multiple Web sites    The Web content management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable people to publish Web content with an easy-to-use content authoring tool and a built-in approval process. Employees can upload content — including images, audio, and video — to Web sites in a timely manner without extensive support from IT staff. New support for rich media includes a new Asset Library, with rich views and pickers; support for videos as a SharePoint content type; a streaming video infrastructure, and a skinable Silverlight media player. Templates in the form of master pages and page layouts enable organizations to apply consistent branding to pages. Built-in Web analytics features provide support for Traffic, Search, and Inventory analytics reports. SharePoint Server 2010 also offers a single deployment and management infrastructure for intranet, extranet, and Internet sites, as well as for multilingual sites.

Managing and working with site content

To help your team be more productive, there are several ways that you can manage and extend content in lists, libraries, and sites. Some features help your team to find and work more efficiently with information. Other features help you manage the access to the information.

Navigating to content
Navigation elements help people to browse through the content that they need. Two navigation items that you can customize are the top link bar and the Quick Launch.

By using the settings pages for each list or library, you can choose which lists and libraries appear on the Quick Launch. You can also change the order of links, add or delete links, and add or delete the sections into which the links are organized. For example, if you have too many lists in the List section, you can add a new section for Tasks Lists where you can include links to your tasks lists. You can make all of these changes to the Quick Launch from within a browser that is compatible with SharePoint Server 2010. You can even add links to pages outside the site.

  Basic tasks in SharePoint Server 2010
Show AllHide All
 Here are some basic tasks and information to help you learn how to use Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010.

In this article

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Overview of SharePoint Foundation and SharePoint Server
Capabilities of SharePoint Server
Parts of a SharePoint site
Site specifics that affect your experience
Adding content to a site
Managing and working with site content

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Overview of SharePoint Foundation and SharePoint Server
SharePoint Foundation 2010 is the underlying technology for SharePoint sites that is available for free and was called Windows SharePoint Services in previous versions. SharePoint Server 2010 relies on SharePoint Foundation technology to provide a consistent, familiar framework for lists and libraries, site administration, and site customization. Any features that are available in SharePoint Foundation are also available in SharePoint Server 2010.

However, SharePoint Server 2010 extends SharePoint Foundation by providing additional features and capabilities. For example, both SharePoint Server and SharePoint Foundation include site templates for collaborating with colleagues on team sites, blogs, and Meeting Workspaces. However, SharePoint Server includes enhanced social computing features such as tagging and news feeds that help people in your organization to discover, organize, navigate, and share information with colleagues. Similarly, SharePoint Server enhances the search technology from SharePoint Foundation to include features that are useful for employees in large organizations, such as the ability to search for business data in SAP, Siebel, and other business applications.

Both SharePoint Foundation and SharePoint Server are designed to work effectively with other programs, servers, and technologies, including those in the Microsoft Office system. For example, you can take a site, list, or library offline in SharePoint Workspace, work with the site content while you are disconnected from your network, and then automatically synchronize your changes when you reconnect. You can complete many SharePoint tasks from within familiar Microsoft Office programs. For example, you can initiate or participate in a workflow to approve an expense report from within Microsoft Word.

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Capabilities of SharePoint Server
The capabilities of SharePoint Server 2010 are focused in six areas. This article briefly introduces each of these capabilities and then links to related articles where you can learn more.

Collaboration and social computing
SharePoint Server 2010 extends the collaboration features of SharePoint Foundation by promoting easy authoring from the browser or from familiar applications such as Microsoft Word, helping users relate resources with tagging and ratings, and helping people find answers faster through news feeds and people search.

One of the primary places where you can take advantage of these capabilities is on your My Site. My Site is your own SharePoint site where you can share documents, links, and information about yourself in an online profile. You can also blog about topics of interest or search for the information you need to do your job.



You decide what information you want to share and what information you want to keep private on your My Site. You can then tag links to information and find information that other people tag or share on their newsfeeds. To learn more about managing information on your My Site, see Manage the information you share through your My Site and profile.

SharePoint Server 2010 also enables participation anywhere by offering a rich SharePoint Workspace experience while online or disconnected from your network and freeing users to collaborate on the go.

Enterprise Content Management
Enterprise Content Management (ECM) from Microsoft helps organizations overcome the challenges posed by large volumes of unmanaged content. SharePoint Server 2010 is a central part of the Microsoft ECM solution, which extends content management to every employee in an organization through integration with familiar tools such as the Microsoft Office system. The Microsoft ECM solution provides capabilities for managing the entire life cycle of content — from creation, to editing and collaboration, to expiration — on a single unified platform.

SharePoint Server 2010 helps organizations manage the entire life cycle of content by providing distinct sets of features that enable organizations to achieve the following goals:

Manage diverse content    The document management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 help organizations consolidate diverse content from multiple locations into a centrally managed repository with consistent categorization. The new document sets feature enables your organization to create and manage work products that span multiple documents. Integrated search capabilities help people find, share, and use this information. Metadata management capabilities such as the new Term Store feature can help organizations to centrally manage metadata across sites. Metadata is information about data that is used to help identify, structure, discover, and manage information. New support for metadata-driven navigation, and the ability to embed metadata fields in documents improves information search and discovery. Content can also be protected from unauthorized access. Collaboration tools, such as workflow, help people work better together to create, review, and approve documents in a structured way.
Satisfy compliance and legal requirements    The records management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable organizations to store and protect business records, either in-place next to in-progress records or in a locked down central repository. Organizations can apply expiration policies to records to ensure that they are retained for the appropriate time period to comply with regulations or corporate business policies, thereby mitigating legal risk to the organization. Audit trails provide proof to internal and external auditors that records were retained appropriately. Holds can be placed upon specific records under legal discovery to prevent their destruction.
Efficiently manage multiple Web sites    The Web content management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable people to publish Web content with an easy-to-use content authoring tool and a built-in approval process. Employees can upload content — including images, audio, and video — to Web sites in a timely manner without extensive support from IT staff. New support for rich media includes a new Asset Library, with rich views and pickers; support for videos as a SharePoint content type; a streaming video infrastructure, and a skinable Silverlight media player. Templates in the form of master pages and page layouts enable organizations to apply consistent branding to pages. Built-in Web analytics features provide support for Traffic, Search, and Inventory analytics reports. SharePoint Server 2010 also offers a single deployment and management infrastructure for intranet, extranet, and Internet sites, as well as for multilingual sites.
Enterprise search
SharePoint Server 2010 delivers a powerful search infrastructure that complements other business productivity capabilities such Enterprise Content Management and collaboration to help people get better answers faster and amplify the impact of knowledge and expertise.

Search takes into account your personal context and helps you refine your search by using interactive navigation to guide you to the information you need. SharePoint Server extends the reach of search across more content sources and content types to connect to all the information in your enterprise — including enterprise applications such as SAP, Siebel, or custom databases — and make the information available to the people who need it.

Business intelligence
Business intelligence is a set of methodologies, technology, and processes that takes information stored in organizational systems and makes it actionable by putting it into the hands of the people who need it most so that they can make informed decisions. As a key part of the Microsoft business intelligence platform, SharePoint Server 2010 can help extend business intelligence capabilities to everyone within an organization, so that everyone is able to access the right data to make the right decisions.

Your organization probably stores data in a variety of formats, such as databases, e-mail messages, and spreadsheet files. SharePoint Server 2010 helps you extract data from a variety of sources and present that data in ways that facilitate analysis and decision making.

Excel Services empowers decision makers to publish, share, and manage Excel workbooks on a SharePoint site. Other people in the organization can then modify cell values, formulas, and formatting from the browser as they analyze the data.

PerformancePoint Services in SharePoint Server 2010 can increase visibility into key organizational objectives and metrics, and enable richer depth of analysis and insight. You or others in your organization can create and use interactive dashboards with scorecards, reports, and filters to find trends. You can also add rich charts to your SharePoint sites and connect the charts to data from a variety of sources, such as SharePoint lists, external data lists, Business Data Connectivity Services, Excel Services, or other Web Parts.

Portals
With SharePoint Server 2010, organizations can build and maintain portal sites for every aspect of their business (enterprise intranet portals, corporate Internet Web sites, and divisional portal sites). Enterprise intranet and divisional portals can connect individual sites across an organization and consolidate access to existing business applications. Teams and individuals in an organization can use a portal site to access the expertise, information, and business applications that they need in order to do their jobs.

Individuals within an organization who use a portal site can take advantage of their My Site sites. A My Site is a personal site that gives you a central location to manage and store your documents, content, links, and contacts. My Site serves as a point of contact for other users in your organization to find information about you, your skills, and your interests. My Sites include the social computing features mentioned earlier in this article.

SharePoint Server 2010 also includes features that organizations can use to personalize the experience of a portal site for individual users, such as targeting content to specific types of users. Your organization can further customize the portal site by using a SharePoint-compatible Web design program such as SharePoint Server 2010.

Business process and forms
SharePoint Server 2010 provides many features that can help you integrate and streamline your business processes. Workflows can streamline the cost of coordinating common business processes, such as project approval or document review, by managing and tracking the tasks involved with those processes. SharePoint Server 2010 has several predefined workflows that you can use as they are or customize to suit your needs. You can also use SharePoint Designer to create custom workflows that support your unique business processes.

You can also create browser-based forms and gather data from organizations that do not use Microsoft InfoPath 2010.

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Parts of a SharePoint site
A site is a group of related Web pages where your organization can work on projects, conduct meetings, and share information. For example, your team might have its own site where it stores schedules, files, and procedural information. Your team site might be part of a large organizational portal site where departments such as Human Resources write and publish information and resources for the rest of the organization.

All SharePoint sites have common elements that you should know about to get started: lists, libraries, Web Parts, and views.



Lists    A list is a Web site component where your organization can store, share, and manage information. For example, you can create a task list to track work assignments or track team events on a calendar. You can also conduct a survey or host discussions on a discussion board.

Libraries    A library is a special type of list that stores files as well as information about files. You can control how files are viewed, tracked, managed, and created in libraries.

Views    You can use views to see the items in a list or library that are most important to you or that best fit a purpose. For example, you can create a view of all the items in a list that apply to a specific department, or to highlight particular documents in a library. You can create multiple views of a list or library that people can select from. You can also use a Web Part to display a view of a list or library on a separate page of your site.



Web Parts    A Web Part is a modular unit of information that forms a basic building block of most pages on a site. If you have permission to edit pages on your site, you can use Web Parts to customize your site to display pictures and charts, portions of other Web pages, lists of documents, customized views of business data, and more.



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Site specifics that affect your experience
The specifics of your installation and configuration of SharePoint affect what you see and what options are available to you on your site.

Permissions    If you are assigned to the default Full Control permission level, you have the full range of options to manage the site. If you are assigned to the Contribute or Read permission level, your options and access to site content are more limited. Many of the options discussed in this article are not available to users with the Reader permission level, which allows users to read content but not make changes to it. Because permissions are designed to be flexible and customizable, your organization may have its own unique settings.

Customization    Your organization may have customized the permissions and branding of your site, or even customized site navigation and moved controls such as the Site Actions menu to a different location on the page. Similarly, your organization may have decided not to use the ribbon functionality introduced in SharePoint 2010.

Version of SharePoint    This article discusses how to get started in SharePoint Server 2010. If your organization is using SharePoint Foundation 2010, see Getting started with SharePoint Foundation 2010. If you are using a previous version of SharePoint, see the Help for that version.

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Adding content to a site
You can add items to lists and files to libraries by using a Web browser. The buttons you use to perform the most common actions are on the ribbon, which is near the top of the page on most pages of a site.



Buttons on the ribbon may be grayed out for any of the following reasons:

The action is not applicable or it depends on some other action. For example, you must select the check box for a document before you can check it out.
You do not have permission to complete the task.
The feature is not enabled for the site. For example, workflows may not be enabled on the site.
You can also save files to a library from some client programs that are compatible with SharePoint Server. For example, you can save a Microsoft Word document to a library on a SharePoint site while you work in Word.

To add an item to a list or a file to a library, you must have permission to contribute to the list or library. For more information about how your organization uses permissions and permission levels, ask your site owner or administrator.

When you add the item or file, other people who have permission to read the list can view the item or file, unless it requires approval. If the item or file requires approval, then it is stored in a pending state in the list or library, until someone with the appropriate permissions approves it. If you are already viewing the list or library when an item or file is added, you may need to refresh your browser to see the new item or file.

Lists and libraries can also take advantage of e-mail features, if incoming or outgoing mail is enabled on your site. Some lists, such as calendars, announcements, blogs, and discussion boards, can be set up so that people can add content to them by sending e-mail. Other lists, such as tasks and issue-tracking lists, can be set up to send e-mail to people when items are assigned to them.

In addition to adding content to existing lists and libraries, you may have permission to create new lists and libraries. The list and library templates give you a head start. Depending on your permission level, you can also create and customize new pages and sites.

Lists
Although there are different types of lists, the procedure for adding items to them is similar, so you don't need to learn several new techniques to work with different types of lists. A list item contains text in a series of columns, but some lists may allow attachments to be added to the item.

Add an item to a list
1.In the list where you want to add the item, click the Items tab on the ribbon. (It's the Events tab for a calendar.)
2.Click New Item (New Event for a calendar).
 Tip   Another quick way to add an event to a calendar is to point to the date on the calendar, and then click Add.

3.Complete the required fields and any others that you want to complete.
4.Click Save.
Edit or delete an item in a list
1.Point to an item and then select the check box that appears next to the item.
 Tip   You can perform actions on multiple items by selecting multiple check boxes.

2.On the Items tab on the ribbon, click either Edit Item or Delete Item, as appropriate.
On many types of sites, some lists are created for you. These default lists range from a discussion board to a calendar list. If you have permission, you can also create lists from several types of list templates, which provide structure and settings to give you a head start.

Create a list
1.To create a list, click the Site Actions menu , and then click More create options.
 Note   If you do not see the Site Actions menu or if the option to create does not appear, you may not have permission to create a list.

2.On the Create page, click the type of list you want to create. For example, Links.
3.Type a Name for the list, complete any other fields you want to complete, and then click Create.
Libraries
A library is a location on a site where you can create, collect, update, and manage files with team members. Each library displays a list of files and key information about the files, which helps people to use the files to work together.

You can add a file to a library by uploading it from your Web browser. After you add the file to the library, other people with the appropriate permission can see the file. If you are already viewing the library when a file is added, you may need to refresh your browser to see the new file.

If you are using a program that is compatible with SharePoint Server, you can create a new file based on a template while you are working in the library. You can also save a file to the library from another program such as SharePoint Workspace or Microsoft Word.

Add a file to a library
1.In the library where you want to add the file, click the Documents tab on the ribbon.
2.Click Upload Document.
3.Browse to the document and then click OK.
 Tip   If you are using a program that is compatible with SharePoint Server 2010, such as Microsoft Word 2010, you can drag and drop documents from Windows Explorer into the Upload Document dialog box.

Edit or delete a file in a library
1.Point to a file and then select the check box that appears next to the file.
2.On the Documents tab on the ribbon, click either Edit Document or Delete Document, as appropriate.
A default library, called Shared Documents, is created for you when you create many types of sites. Shared Documents is a document library that you can use for storing several types of files. You can create more libraries, such as a picture library for storing images, if you have permission to manage lists.

Create a document library
1.To create a document library, click the Site Actions menu , and then click New Document Library.
 Note   If you do not see the Site Actions menu or if the option to create does not appear, you may not have permission to create a library.

2.Type a Name for the library, complete any other fields you want to complete, and then click Create.
 Note   To see the other types of libraries you can create, click Site Actions, and then click More create options. Point to a library option to see a description of it.

Create another type of library
1.To create a library, click the Site Actions menu , and then click More Options.
 Note   If you do not see the Site Actions menu or if the option to create does not appear, you may not have permission to create a library.

2.Point to a library option to see a description of it.
3.Type a Name for the library, complete any other fields you want to complete, and then click Create.
 Note    To set options such as whether the library appears on the Quick Launch, click More Options before you click Create.

Sites and pages
A site can serve a general purpose, such as storing schedules, guidelines, files, and other information that your team refers to frequently. Or a site may serve a more specific purpose, such as keeping track of a meeting, or hosting a blog, where a member of your organization frequently posts news and ideas.



Your organization can use pages, subsites (subsite: A complete Web site stored in a named subdirectory of the top-level Web site. Each subsite can have administration, authoring, and browsing permissions that are independent from the top-level Web site and other subsites.), and top-level sites (top-level site: A Web site at the top of the hierarchy in a site collection, from which you can manage site collection features. A top-level site can have multiple subsites.) to divide site content into distinct, separately manageable sites. For example, each department in your organization may have its own team site that is part of a larger portal site.

You can add content to sites by adding lists and libraries. If you have permission, you can also add pages to your site. You may consider adding Web Part Pages (Web Part Page: A special type of Web page that contains one or more Web Parts. A Web Part Page consolidates data, such as lists and charts, and Web content, such as text and images, into a dynamic information portal built around a common task.), which enable you to use Web Parts to add dynamic content quickly.

If you need to create new sites, you can choose from several types of site templates to give you a head start on creating a new site. Whether you can create sites and subsites depends on how your organization has set up its sites and its permissions to create them. For more information about how your organization manages permission to sites, see your site owner or administrator.

Create a site
1.To create a site, click the Site Actions menu , and then click New site.
 Note   If you do not see the Site Actions menu or if the option to create does not appear, you may not have permission to create a site.

2.Type a Title and URL name for the site.
3.Under Template Selection, select a site template.
4.Choose any other options you want, and then click Create.
Create a page
 Note   The steps for creating a page my vary depending on the type of site you are on, whether publishing features are enable, and whether approval is required to publish pages.

1.To create a page, click the Site Actions menu , and then click New Page.
 Note   If you do not see the Site Actions menu or if the option to create does not appear, you may not have permission to create a page.

2.Type a name for the page, and then click create.
3.On the new page you created, do one or more of the following:
To add text, type or copy text into the text box.
To format your text, click the Format Text tab on the ribbon and select a button.
To insert a Web Part or an existing list, click the Insert tab, click the appropriate button, select the Web Part or list you want, and then click Add.
To insert a new list, click the Insert tab, type a title for your list, click a list type to select it, and then click OK.
4.When you are finished editing the page, click Save on the ribbon.
Edit a page
1.To edit a page, click the Edit button on the ribbon.
 Note   If you do not see the Edit button, you may not have permission to edit a page.

2.Do one or more of the following:
To add text, type or copy text into the text box.
To format your text, click the Format Text tab on the ribbon and select a button.
To insert a Web Part or an existing list, click the Insert tab, click the appropriate button, select the Web Part or list you want, and then click Add.
To insert a new list, click the Insert tab, type a title for your list, click a list type to select it, and then click OK.
3.When you are finished editing the page, click Save on the ribbon.
 Top of Page Top of Page

Managing and working with site content
To help your team be more productive, there are several ways that you can manage and extend content in lists, libraries, and sites. Some features help your team to find and work more efficiently with information. Other features help you manage the access to the information.

Navigating to content
Navigation elements help people to browse through the content that they need. Two navigation items that you can customize are the top link bar and the Quick Launch.

By using the settings pages for each list or library, you can choose which lists and libraries appear on the Quick Launch. You can also change the order of links, add or delete links, and add or delete the sections into which the links are organized. For example, if you have too many lists in the List section, you can add a new section for Tasks Lists where you can include links to your tasks lists. You can make all of these changes to the Quick Launch from within a browser that is compatible with SharePoint Server 2010. You can even add links to pages outside the site.

The top link bar provides a way for users of your site to get to other sites in the site collection by displaying a row of tabs at the top of every page in the site. When you create a new site, you can choose whether to include the site on the top link bar of the parent site and whether to use the top link bar from the parent site.

If your site is using a unique top link bar, you can customize the links that appear on the top link bar for the site. Any sites that are created within the parent site can also be displayed on the top link bar, provided that the sites are configured to inherit the top link bar of the parent site. You can also include links to other sites outside of your site collection.

Managing access to content
A site owner or administrator can grant permission levels to users and to SharePoint groups, which contain users. The permissions can be applied to a site, the lists and libraries on a site, and the items in the lists and libraries.

You can assign different permission levels for different objects, such as a specific site, list, library, folder within a list or library, list item, or document.

Organizing lists and libraries
How you organize your lists and libraries depends on the needs of your group and on how you prefer to store and search for your information. Some planning can help you to set up the structure that works best for your organization.

Information in lists and libraries is stored in columns, such as Title, Last Name, or Company. You can use columns to sort and filter items as you would in a spreadsheet by clicking the column headings in a list or library. You can also use views to see the items in a list or library that are most important to you.

Enterprise Content Management
Enterprise Content Management (ECM) from Microsoft helps organizations overcome the challenges posed by large volumes of unmanaged content. SharePoint Server 2010 is a central part of the Microsoft ECM solution, which extends content management to every employee in an organization through integration with familiar tools such as the Microsoft Office system. The Microsoft ECM solution provides capabilities for managing the entire life cycle of content — from creation, to editing and collaboration, to expiration — on a single unified platform.

SharePoint Server 2010 helps organizations manage the entire life cycle of content by providing distinct sets of features that enable organizations to achieve the following goals:

Manage diverse content    The document management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 help organizations consolidate diverse content from multiple locations into a centrally managed repository with consistent categorization. The new document sets feature enables your organization to create and manage work products that span multiple documents. Integrated search capabilities help people find, share, and use this information. Metadata management capabilities such as the new Term Store feature can help organizations to centrally manage metadata across sites. Metadata is information about data that is used to help identify, structure, discover, and manage information. New support for metadata-driven navigation, and the ability to embed metadata fields in documents improves information search and discovery. Content can also be protected from unauthorized access. Collaboration tools, such as workflow, help people work better together to create, review, and approve documents in a structured way.

Satisfy compliance and legal requirements    The records management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable organizations to store and protect business records, either in-place next to in-progress records or in a locked down central repository. Organizations can apply expiration policies to records to ensure that they are retained for the appropriate time period to comply with regulations or corporate business policies, thereby mitigating legal risk to the organization. Audit trails provide proof to internal and external auditors that records were retained appropriately. Holds can be placed upon specific records under legal discovery to prevent their destruction.

Efficiently manage multiple Web sites    The Web content management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable people to publish Web content with an easy-to-use content authoring tool and a built-in approval process. Employees can upload content — including images, audio, and video — to Web sites in a timely manner without extensive support from IT staff. New support for rich media includes a new Asset Library, with rich views and pickers; support for videos as a SharePoint content type; a streaming video infrastructure, and a skinable Silverlight media player. Templates in the form of master pages and page layouts enable organizations to apply consistent branding to pages. Built-in Web analytics features provide support for Traffic, Search, and Inventory analytics reports. SharePoint Server 2010 also offers a single deployment and management infrastructure for intranet, extranet, and Internet sites, as well as for multilingual sites.

Site specifics that affect your experience

The specifics of your installation and configuration of SharePoint affect what you see and what options are available to you on your site.

Permissions    If you are assigned to the default Full Control permission level, you have the full range of options to manage the site. If you are assigned to the Contribute or Read permission level, your options and access to site content are more limited. Many of the options discussed in this article are not available to users with the Reader permission level, which allows users to read content but not make changes to it. Because permissions are designed to be flexible and customizable, your organization may have its own unique settings.

Customization    Your organization may have customized the permissions and branding of your site, or even customized site navigation and moved controls such as the Site Actions menu to a different location on the page. Similarly, your organization may have decided not to use the ribbon functionality introduced in SharePoint 2010.

Version of SharePoint This article discusses how to get started in SharePoint Server 2010. If your organization is using SharePoint Foundation 2010, see Getting started with SharePoint Foundation 2010. If you are using a previous version of SharePoint, see the Help for that version.

Adding content to a site
You can add items to lists and files to libraries by using a Web browser. The buttons you use to perform the most common actions are on the ribbon, which is near the top of the page on most pages of a site.

Buttons on the ribbon may be grayed out for any of the following reasons:

The action is not applicable or it depends on some other action. For example, you must select the check box for a document before you can check it out.
You do not have permission to complete the task.
The feature is not enabled for the site. For example, workflows may not be enabled on the site.

Enterprise Content Management
Enterprise Content Management (ECM) from Microsoft helps organizations overcome the challenges posed by large volumes of unmanaged content. SharePoint Server 2010 is a central part of the Microsoft ECM solution, which extends content management to every employee in an organization through integration with familiar tools such as the Microsoft Office system. The Microsoft ECM solution provides capabilities for managing the entire life cycle of content — from creation, to editing and collaboration, to expiration — on a single unified platform.

SharePoint Server 2010 helps organizations manage the entire life cycle of content by providing distinct sets of features that enable organizations to achieve the following goals:

Manage diverse content    The document management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 help organizations consolidate diverse content from multiple locations into a centrally managed repository with consistent categorization. The new document sets feature enables your organization to create and manage work products that span multiple documents. Integrated search capabilities help people find, share, and use this information. Metadata management capabilities such as the new Term Store feature can help organizations to centrally manage metadata across sites. Metadata is information about data that is used to help identify, structure, discover, and manage information. New support for metadata-driven navigation, and the ability to embed metadata fields in documents improves information search and discovery. Content can also be protected from unauthorized access. Collaboration tools, such as workflow, help people work better together to create, review, and approve documents in a structured way.

Satisfy compliance and legal requirements    The records management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable organizations to store and protect business records, either in-place next to in-progress records or in a locked down central repository. Organizations can apply expiration policies to records to ensure that they are retained for the appropriate time period to comply with regulations or corporate business policies, thereby mitigating legal risk to the organization. Audit trails provide proof to internal and external auditors that records were retained appropriately. Holds can be placed upon specific records under legal discovery to prevent their destruction.

Efficiently manage multiple Web sites    The Web content management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable people to publish Web content with an easy-to-use content authoring tool and a built-in approval process. Employees can upload content — including images, audio, and video — to Web sites in a timely manner without extensive support from IT staff. New support for rich media includes a new Asset Library, with rich views and pickers; support for videos as a SharePoint content type; a streaming video infrastructure, and a skinable Silverlight media player. Templates in the form of master pages and page layouts enable organizations to apply consistent branding to pages. Built-in Web analytics features provide support for Traffic, Search, and Inventory analytics reports. SharePoint Server 2010 also offers a single deployment and management infrastructure for intranet, extranet, and Internet sites, as well as for multilingual sites.

Parts of a SharePoint site

A site is a group of related Web pages where your organization can work on projects, conduct meetings, and share information. For example, your team might have its own site where it stores schedules, files, and procedural information. Your team site might be part of a large organizational portal site where departments such as Human Resources write and publish information and resources for the rest of the organization.

All SharePoint sites have common elements that you should know about to get started: lists, libraries, Web Parts, and views.

SharePoint Server 2010 provides many features that can help you integrate and streamline your business processes. Workflows can streamline the cost of coordinating common business processes, such as project approval or document review, by managing and tracking the tasks involved with those processes. SharePoint Server 2010 has several predefined workflows that you can use as they are or customize to suit your needs. You can also use SharePoint Designer to create custom workflows that support your unique business processes.

You can also create browser-based forms and gather data from organizations that do not use Microsoft InfoPath 2010.

Collaboration and social computing
SharePoint Server 2010 extends the collaboration features of SharePoint Foundation by promoting easy authoring from the browser or from familiar applications such as Microsoft Word, helping users relate resources with tagging and ratings, and helping people find answers faster through news feeds and people search.

One of the primary places where you can take advantage of these capabilities is on your My Site. My Site is your own SharePoint site where you can share documents, links, and information about yourself in an online profile. You can also blog about topics of interest or search for the information you need to do your job.

Enterprise Content Management
Enterprise Content Management (ECM) from Microsoft helps organizations overcome the challenges posed by large volumes of unmanaged content. SharePoint Server 2010 is a central part of the Microsoft ECM solution, which extends content management to every employee in an organization through integration with familiar tools such as the Microsoft Office system. The Microsoft ECM solution provides capabilities for managing the entire life cycle of content — from creation, to editing and collaboration, to expiration — on a single unified platform.

SharePoint Server 2010 helps organizations manage the entire life cycle of content by providing distinct sets of features that enable organizations to achieve the following goals:

Manage diverse content    The document management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 help organizations consolidate diverse content from multiple locations into a centrally managed repository with consistent categorization. The new document sets feature enables your organization to create and manage work products that span multiple documents. Integrated search capabilities help people find, share, and use this information. Metadata management capabilities such as the new Term Store feature can help organizations to centrally manage metadata across sites. Metadata is information about data that is used to help identify, structure, discover, and manage information. New support for metadata-driven navigation, and the ability to embed metadata fields in documents improves information search and discovery. Content can also be protected from unauthorized access. Collaboration tools, such as workflow, help people work better together to create, review, and approve documents in a structured way.

Satisfy compliance and legal requirements    The records management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable organizations to store and protect business records, either in-place next to in-progress records or in a locked down central repository. Organizations can apply expiration policies to records to ensure that they are retained for the appropriate time period to comply with regulations or corporate business policies, thereby mitigating legal risk to the organization. Audit trails provide proof to internal and external auditors that records were retained appropriately. Holds can be placed upon specific records under legal discovery to prevent their destruction.

Efficiently manage multiple Web sites    The Web content management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable people to publish Web content with an easy-to-use content authoring tool and a built-in approval process. Employees can upload content — including images, audio, and video — to Web sites in a timely manner without extensive support from IT staff. New support for rich media includes a new Asset Library, with rich views and pickers; support for videos as a SharePoint content type; a streaming video infrastructure, and a skinable Silverlight media player. Templates in the form of master pages and page layouts enable organizations to apply consistent branding to pages. Built-in Web analytics features provide support for Traffic, Search, and Inventory analytics reports. SharePoint Server 2010 also offers a single deployment and management infrastructure for intranet, extranet, and Internet sites, as well as for multilingual sites.

Portals

With SharePoint Server 2010, organizations can build and maintain portal sites for every aspect of their business (enterprise intranet portals, corporate Internet Web sites, and divisional portal sites). Enterprise intranet and divisional portals can connect individual sites across an organization and consolidate access to existing business applications. Teams and individuals in an organization can use a portal site to access the expertise, information, and business applications that they need in order to do their jobs.

Individuals within an organization who use a portal site can take advantage of their My Site sites. A My Site is a personal site that gives you a central location to manage and store your documents, content, links, and contacts. My Site serves as a point of contact for other users in your organization to find information about you, your skills, and your interests. My Sites include the social computing features mentioned earlier in this article.

SharePoint Server 2010 also includes features that organizations can use to personalize the experience of a portal site for individual users, such as targeting content to specific types of users. Your organization can further customize the portal site by using a SharePoint-compatible Web design program such as SharePoint Server 2010.

Capabilities of SharePoint Server
The capabilities of SharePoint Server 2010 are focused in six areas. This article briefly introduces each of these capabilities and then links to related articles where you can learn more.

Collaboration and social computing
SharePoint Server 2010 extends the collaboration features of SharePoint Foundation by promoting easy authoring from the browser or from familiar applications such as Microsoft Word, helping users relate resources with tagging and ratings, and helping people find answers faster through news feeds and people search.

One of the primary places where you can take advantage of these capabilities is on your My Site. My Site is your own SharePoint site where you can share documents, links, and information about yourself in an online profile. You can also blog about topics of interest or search for the information you need to do your job.

Enterprise Content Management
Enterprise Content Management (ECM) from Microsoft helps organizations overcome the challenges posed by large volumes of unmanaged content. SharePoint Server 2010 is a central part of the Microsoft ECM solution, which extends content management to every employee in an organization through integration with familiar tools such as the Microsoft Office system. The Microsoft ECM solution provides capabilities for managing the entire life cycle of content — from creation, to editing and collaboration, to expiration — on a single unified platform.

SharePoint Server 2010 helps organizations manage the entire life cycle of content by providing distinct sets of features that enable organizations to achieve the following goals:

Manage diverse content    The document management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 help organizations consolidate diverse content from multiple locations into a centrally managed repository with consistent categorization. The new document sets feature enables your organization to create and manage work products that span multiple documents. Integrated search capabilities help people find, share, and use this information. Metadata management capabilities such as the new Term Store feature can help organizations to centrally manage metadata across sites. Metadata is information about data that is used to help identify, structure, discover, and manage information. New support for metadata-driven navigation, and the ability to embed metadata fields in documents improves information search and discovery. Content can also be protected from unauthorized access. Collaboration tools, such as workflow, help people work better together to create, review, and approve documents in a structured way.

Satisfy compliance and legal requirements    The records management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable organizations to store and protect business records, either in-place next to in-progress records or in a locked down central repository. Organizations can apply expiration policies to records to ensure that they are retained for the appropriate time period to comply with regulations or corporate business policies, thereby mitigating legal risk to the organization. Audit trails provide proof to internal and external auditors that records were retained appropriately. Holds can be placed upon specific records under legal discovery to prevent their destruction.

Efficiently manage multiple Web sites    The Web content management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable people to publish Web content with an easy-to-use content authoring tool and a built-in approval process. Employees can upload content — including images, audio, and video — to Web sites in a timely manner without extensive support from IT staff. New support for rich media includes a new Asset Library, with rich views and pickers; support for videos as a SharePoint content type; a streaming video infrastructure, and a skinable Silverlight media player. Templates in the form of master pages and page layouts enable organizations to apply consistent branding to pages. Built-in Web analytics features provide support for Traffic, Search, and Inventory analytics reports. SharePoint Server 2010 also offers a single deployment and management infrastructure for intranet, extranet, and Internet sites, as well as for multilingual sites.

Business intelligence

Business intelligence is a set of methodologies, technology, and processes that takes information stored in organizational systems and makes it actionable by putting it into the hands of the people who need it most so that they can make informed decisions. As a key part of the Microsoft business intelligence platform, SharePoint Server 2010 can help extend business intelligence capabilities to everyone within an organization, so that everyone is able to access the right data to make the right decisions.

Your organization probably stores data in a variety of formats, such as databases, e-mail messages, and spreadsheet files. SharePoint Server 2010 helps you extract data from a variety of sources and present that data in ways that facilitate analysis and decision making.

Excel Services empowers decision makers to publish, share, and manage Excel workbooks on a SharePoint site. Other people in the organization can then modify cell values, formulas, and formatting from the browser as they analyze the data.

PerformancePoint Services in SharePoint Server 2010 can increase visibility into key organizational objectives and metrics, and enable richer depth of analysis and insight. You or others in your organization can create and use interactive dashboards with scorecards, reports, and filters to find trends. You can also add rich charts to your SharePoint sites and connect the charts to data from a variety of sources, such as SharePoint lists, external data lists, Business Data Connectivity Services, Excel Services, or other Web Parts.


Capabilities of SharePoint Server
The capabilities of SharePoint Server 2010 are focused in six areas. This article briefly introduces each of these capabilities and then links to related articles where you can learn more.

Collaboration and social computing
SharePoint Server 2010 extends the collaboration features of SharePoint Foundation by promoting easy authoring from the browser or from familiar applications such as Microsoft Word, helping users relate resources with tagging and ratings, and helping people find answers faster through news feeds and people search.

One of the primary places where you can take advantage of these capabilities is on your My Site. My Site is your own SharePoint site where you can share documents, links, and information about yourself in an online profile. You can also blog about topics of interest or search for the information you need to do your job.

Enterprise Content Management
Enterprise Content Management (ECM) from Microsoft helps organizations overcome the challenges posed by large volumes of unmanaged content. SharePoint Server 2010 is a central part of the Microsoft ECM solution, which extends content management to every employee in an organization through integration with familiar tools such as the Microsoft Office system. The Microsoft ECM solution provides capabilities for managing the entire life cycle of content — from creation, to editing and collaboration, to expiration — on a single unified platform.

SharePoint Server 2010 helps organizations manage the entire life cycle of content by providing distinct sets of features that enable organizations to achieve the following goals:

Manage diverse content    The document management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 help organizations consolidate diverse content from multiple locations into a centrally managed repository with consistent categorization. The new document sets feature enables your organization to create and manage work products that span multiple documents. Integrated search capabilities help people find, share, and use this information. Metadata management capabilities such as the new Term Store feature can help organizations to centrally manage metadata across sites. Metadata is information about data that is used to help identify, structure, discover, and manage information. New support for metadata-driven navigation, and the ability to embed metadata fields in documents improves information search and discovery. Content can also be protected from unauthorized access. Collaboration tools, such as workflow, help people work better together to create, review, and approve documents in a structured way.

Satisfy compliance and legal requirements    The records management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable organizations to store and protect business records, either in-place next to in-progress records or in a locked down central repository. Organizations can apply expiration policies to records to ensure that they are retained for the appropriate time period to comply with regulations or corporate business policies, thereby mitigating legal risk to the organization. Audit trails provide proof to internal and external auditors that records were retained appropriately. Holds can be placed upon specific records under legal discovery to prevent their destruction.

Efficiently manage multiple Web sites    The Web content management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable people to publish Web content with an easy-to-use content authoring tool and a built-in approval process. Employees can upload content — including images, audio, and video — to Web sites in a timely manner without extensive support from IT staff. New support for rich media includes a new Asset Library, with rich views and pickers; support for videos as a SharePoint content type; a streaming video infrastructure, and a skinable Silverlight media player. Templates in the form of master pages and page layouts enable organizations to apply consistent branding to pages. Built-in Web analytics features provide support for Traffic, Search, and Inventory analytics reports. SharePoint Server 2010 also offers a single deployment and management infrastructure for intranet, extranet, and Internet sites, as well as for multilingual sites.

Overview of SharePoint Foundation and SharePoint Server

SharePoint Foundation 2010 is the underlying technology for SharePoint sites that is available for free and was called Windows SharePoint Services in previous versions. SharePoint Server 2010 relies on SharePoint Foundation technology to provide a consistent, familiar framework for lists and libraries, site administration, and site customization. Any features that are available in SharePoint Foundation are also available in SharePoint Server 2010.

However, SharePoint Server 2010 extends SharePoint Foundation by providing additional features and capabilities. For example, both SharePoint Server and SharePoint Foundation include site templates for collaborating with colleagues on team sites, blogs, and Meeting Workspaces. However, SharePoint Server includes enhanced social computing features such as tagging and news feeds that help people in your organization to discover, organize, navigate, and share information with colleagues. Similarly, SharePoint Server enhances the search technology from SharePoint Foundation to include features that are useful for employees in large organizations, such as the ability to search for business data in SAP, Siebel, and other business applications.

Both SharePoint Foundation and SharePoint Server are designed to work effectively with other programs, servers, and technologies, including those in the Microsoft Office system. For example, you can take a site, list, or library offline in SharePoint Workspace, work with the site content while you are disconnected from your network, and then automatically synchronize your changes when you reconnect. You can complete many SharePoint tasks from within familiar Microsoft Office programs. For example, you can initiate or participate in a workflow to approve an expense report from within Microsoft Word.

Capabilities of SharePoint Server
The capabilities of SharePoint Server 2010 are focused in six areas. This article briefly introduces each of these capabilities and then links to related articles where you can learn more.

Collaboration and social computing
SharePoint Server 2010 extends the collaboration features of SharePoint Foundation by promoting easy authoring from the browser or from familiar applications such as Microsoft Word, helping users relate resources with tagging and ratings, and helping people find answers faster through news feeds and people search.

One of the primary places where you can take advantage of these capabilities is on your My Site. My Site is your own SharePoint site where you can share documents, links, and information about yourself in an online profile. You can also blog about topics of interest or search for the information you need to do your job.

Enterprise Content Management
Enterprise Content Management (ECM) from Microsoft helps organizations overcome the challenges posed by large volumes of unmanaged content. SharePoint Server 2010 is a central part of the Microsoft ECM solution, which extends content management to every employee in an organization through integration with familiar tools such as the Microsoft Office system. The Microsoft ECM solution provides capabilities for managing the entire life cycle of content — from creation, to editing and collaboration, to expiration — on a single unified platform.

SharePoint Server 2010 helps organizations manage the entire life cycle of content by providing distinct sets of features that enable organizations to achieve the following goals:

Manage diverse content    The document management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 help organizations consolidate diverse content from multiple locations into a centrally managed repository with consistent categorization. The new document sets feature enables your organization to create and manage work products that span multiple documents. Integrated search capabilities help people find, share, and use this information. Metadata management capabilities such as the new Term Store feature can help organizations to centrally manage metadata across sites. Metadata is information about data that is used to help identify, structure, discover, and manage information. New support for metadata-driven navigation, and the ability to embed metadata fields in documents improves information search and discovery. Content can also be protected from unauthorized access. Collaboration tools, such as workflow, help people work better together to create, review, and approve documents in a structured way.

Satisfy compliance and legal requirements    The records management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable organizations to store and protect business records, either in-place next to in-progress records or in a locked down central repository. Organizations can apply expiration policies to records to ensure that they are retained for the appropriate time period to comply with regulations or corporate business policies, thereby mitigating legal risk to the organization. Audit trails provide proof to internal and external auditors that records were retained appropriately. Holds can be placed upon specific records under legal discovery to prevent their destruction.

Efficiently manage multiple Web sites    The Web content management capabilities in SharePoint Server 2010 enable people to publish Web content with an easy-to-use content authoring tool and a built-in approval process. Employees can upload content — including images, audio, and video — to Web sites in a timely manner without extensive support from IT staff. New support for rich media includes a new Asset Library, with rich views and pickers; support for videos as a SharePoint content type; a streaming video infrastructure, and a skinable Silverlight media player. Templates in the form of master pages and page layouts enable organizations to apply consistent branding to pages. Built-in Web analytics features provide support for Traffic, Search, and Inventory analytics reports. SharePoint Server 2010 also offers a single deployment and management infrastructure for intranet, extranet, and Internet sites, as well as for multilingual sites.

Configure audit settings for a site collection

When you select an event to be audited for a site collection, such as delete and restore, it will be audited for every item in the site collection each time the event occurs. Auditing can potentially generate a large number of audit events, creating a large audit log. This could fill the hard drive, affecting performance and other aspects of a site collection.

 Important    To prevent the audit log from filling the hard drive and potentially degrading the performance of the site collection, we recommended that you enable audit log trimming for site collections with extensive auditing.

To manage the size of the audit log you can configure it to automatically trim and optionally archive the current audit log data in a document library before the data is trimmed. The schedule for audit log trimming is configured by your server administrator in Central Administration. The default is the end of the month.

If you are using SharePoint Online for Microsoft Office 365 for enterprises, auditing for Opening or downloading documents, viewing items in lists, or viewing item properties is not available because of storage and performance concerns.

We recommend that you only select Opening or downloading documents, viewing items in lists, or viewing item properties for SharePoint Server 2010 sites when absolutely needed. This option is likely to generate a large number of events that will potentially degrading the performance and other aspects of the site collection.Which events you audit depends on your auditing needs. For example, regulatory compliance usually has specific requirements that will dictate which events you need to audit. We recommend that you only audit the events required to meet your needs. Additional unnecessary auditing can affect the performance and other aspects of the site collection.

We recommend that you do not set this option unless business needs dictate otherwise. If this option is not set it will use the Farm setting, which is the end of the month by default. A business need could be that your organization has a requirement to maintain your audit log in a non-achieved format for a different time period. The achieved format is the audit log report.

4.Optionally, specify the document library to save audit reports to before the audit log is trimmed. Set this option if you need access to audit log data, using audit log reports, after the audit log has been trimmed.

The events that you select to audit are captured in audit reports that are based on Microsoft Excel 2010 and are available from the Auditing Reports page. You can also create a custom report that includes a number of these events over a specified date range, within a specific area of the site collection, or filtered to an individual user. You cannot modify events once they are logged, but site collection administrators can delete items from the audit log and configure automatic trimming of the audit log data.

You can use the audit feature of Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 to track which users have taken what actions on the sites, content types, lists, libraries, list items, and library files of site collections. Knowing who has done what with which information is critical for many business requirements, such as regulatory compliance and records management.

As a site collection administrator, you can retrieve the history of actions taken by a particular user and can also retrieve the history of actions taken during a particular date range. For example, you can determine which users edited a specific document and when they did this.

You manage the size of the audit log in the Audit Log Trimming section and specify which events to audit in the Documents and Items and Lists, Libraries, and Sites sections.

Site and site collection administration

A site collection is a set of Web sites that can have the same owner and share administration settings. Each site collection contains a top-level Web site and can contain one or more subsites.
Before creating a site from the SharePoint Central Administration Web site, you must create a site collection. Subsites are created within top-level sites and subsites, and they cannot be created within Central Administration.
Web sites on SharePoint Web applications are organized into site collections. Each site collection has a top-level Web site. This top-level Web site can have multiple subsites, and each subsite can have multiple subsites, for as many levels as required. When you create a site collection, a top-level site is automatically created. Each site collection can have only a single top-level site.
The hierarchy of top-level sites and subsites enables, for example, users to have a main working site for a team or division, plus individual working sites or shared sites for projects. Top-level Web sites and subsites allow different levels of control over the features and settings for sites. The administrator of a site collection can control settings and features for both the top-level Web site and any subsites beneath it. For example, in addition to the standard administration tasks for any site, an administrator of a site collection can perform the following tasks.

View usage statistics and storage space allocation.
Manage the site collection Recycle Bin.
Manage Web Part, template, and workflow galleries.
Manage the features that are available in the site collection.
Configure settings, such as regional settings, for the top-level Web site and all subsites.
The administrator of a subsite can control settings and features for only that subsite, and the administrator of the next subsite below can control settings and features for only that subsite. For example, an administrator of a subsite can perform the following tasks:
Add, delete, or change user permissions, if unique permissions have been set.
View usage analysis data.
Change regional settings.
Manage the master page, site content type, and site columns galleries.
Manage Web discussions and alerts.
Change the site name and description, theme, and home page organization.

You can view the site collections and their subsites from Central Administration. To manage the site collections, you must be a member of the Farm Administrators group. Similarly, to manage the subsites within a site collection, you must be a member of the Site Owners group.

A site collection is a hierarchy of sites. When a site collection is created, a top-level site is created within that site collection. The top-level site can contain one or more subsites.
You can create a site collection that is based on an existing Web application, or you can create a Web application. For information about how to create a Web application, see Create or extend a Web application (Office SharePoint Server).
If your application is small, you should use a single site collection to avoid the overhead of managing multiple sites. However, for complex solutions, having multiple site collections makes it easier to organize the complex content within multiple sites.
At the site collection level, permissions and navigation are isolated in the following ways:
Subsites within a site collection can inherit permissions from the top-level site.
Site collections cannot inherit permissions from other site collections.
There is no built-in navigation from one site collection to another.
You should specify a secondary site collection administrator for the new site collection.

You must be a member of the Farm Administrators SharePoint group to complete this procedure.

Administering security for the Business Data Catalog

Administrators can manage the following security settings for the Business Data Catalog:
Authentication. By default, Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 uses the Single Sign-On (SSO) service to authenticate users who are attempting to view business data on SharePoint sites.

Authorization: shared services permissions. After users are authenticated, users must be granted the correct services permissions for the Business Data Catalog. Some of these permissions also require read permission to the Shared Services Administration site. Permissions can be set for all applications in the Business Data Catalog, or for specific line-of-business applications, or for one or more imported entities for a specific line-of-business application.

To access business data, users must be properly authenticated, have all of the necessary services permissions for the Business Data Catalog, line-of-business application, and entity accessed, and have access to the Shared Services Administration site for administrator tasks performed on that site.
Authentication for the Business Data Catalog typically uses SSO to access line-of-business applications by using stored credentials. However, other authentication methods can be used.

Permissions for the Business Data Catalog are administered from the Shared Services Administration Web site for each Shared Services Provider (SSP). Administrators must have the following permissions when working with permissions for the Business Data Catalog:

Read permission to the Shared Services Administration site.
Permissions to the site are granted by site administrators for the site. During installation, the account used to create the SharePoint Services Administration site is granted the rights of a site administrator. This account can later be used to grant read permission to other users.

The Set Permissions shared services permission to the Business Data Catalog. This permission is granted to the first site administrator for the Shared Services Administration site (that is, the account used to create the site). Additional users can be granted this permission by the site administrator or any other user who already has the permission.

Users must have the following services permissions to perform additional tasks:
Edit permission: Used to import, update, and delete application definitions for line-of-business applications.

Execute permission: Used to execute method instances for business data entities. This permission is intended for developers, and does not require access to the Shared Services Administration site.

Select in clients permission: Used to select business data in Web Parts, columns in SharePoint lists, and other clients with access to data from the Business Data Catalog.
This permission is intended for information workers, usually administrators or site owners for SharePoint sites that display business data from line-of-business applications. This permission does not require access to the Shared Services Administration site.

The account used to create the SharePoint Services Administration site is granted all of the services permissions during installation.
Permissions for the Business Data Catalog are managed separately for each SSP. Access to business data imported to the Business Data Catalog for a specific SSP uses the same shared services permissions.
For more information about authorizing access to business data imported to the Business Data Catalog, see Manage authorization for the Business Data Catalog.
The following tasks for administering Business Data Catalog permissions are performed in this order:

Manage authentication for the Business Data Catalog
Manage authorization for the Business Data Catalog

Manage permissions to the Shared Services Administration site

About people search
To enable people search in Office SharePoint Server 2007, you enable, configure, and use the My Site feature. My Site is a personal space for users to manage and store documents and provide information about qualifications, skills, and interests that might be useful to other people. The more information that people share about their projects, responsibilities, and areas of expertise, the more relevant and focused a people search becomes.
You can take advantage of My Site functionality in Office SharePoint Server 2007 to enhance people search capabilities within your organization. People search uses the users’ job-related information in their individual My Site sites to create a broad picture of the skills, projects, knowledge, and responsibilities in your organization.

When planning for people search for users, you can supplement the default search scope for people search with customized search scopes and tabs in the Search Center for more specific groups of users.

Scopes can use information that is stored in the user profile properties, which organize and display all of the properties related to each user. It is essential that data in the user profile properties is accurate, complete, and configured to correctly deliver the relevant data in the search results. You ensure this accuracy and precision by importing user profile information from the Active Directory directory service, Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) servers, and from applications registered in the Business Data Catalog. You can also manually add, edit, and map user profile properties. You crawl the user profiles to make the properties available to be used in the people search, and then you verify the results of the crawl to ensure that the user profile properties were correctly crawled.