Sharepoint 2010 : Use the Text Editing Control in a Page (part 2) - Add and Edit a Picture |
To add a picture to a text editing control, place the cursor where you want the picture to be added and switch to the Insert tab in the Editing Tools ribbon. Open the drop-down menu under the button to expose the options to upload an image from your computer, select an image somewhere else on the web using its address, or select a picture that was already uploaded to the site. |
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Working with the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell (part 8) |
The most common objects that these cmdlets manipulate are the SPSite, SPServer, SPWeb, SPBusinessDataCatalogue, and SPConfigurationDatabase objects. Because Windows PowerShell is mainly an administrator’s tool, and these are the components an administrator manages, this spread of cmdlet is not unexpected |
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Working with the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell (part 7) - Using Parameters |
Notice that there are four ways to use Get-SPSite, and each syntax has an –AssignmentCollection parameter. The –AssignmentCollection parameter relates to an important aspect of the built-in SharePoint cmdlet, which is examined in more detail in the sidebar titled Memory Considerations When Using Windows PowerShell. |
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Working with the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell (part 6) |
Windows PowerShell contains an extensive built-in help system, and you can access it quickly by typing help at the command-line interface. This is an alias for the cmdlet Get-Help. You can even get help about Get-Help by typing Get-Help Get-Help. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Change the Page Layout of a Publishing Page |
You might want to change the page layout that was selected when the page was created. For example, say that a page was created with the “body only” layout, and you want to change it to a layout that includes a web part zone or an image on one side of the text. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Authoring Pages - Edit the Properties of a Page |
ou want to change properties such as the page layout of a publishing page and the title of the page (that is displayed at the top of the user’s browser and in the navigational breadcrumbs, and possibly in other locations on the site), the caption for the page, the page’s description, and the page’s image (which also may appear in different locations on the site). |
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SharePoint 2010 : Managing Systems Remotely with WinRM |
Windows PowerShell 2.0 introduces a new capability to manage your systems remotely from your desktop by using either WinRM or Internet Information Server (IIS). WinRM is often the mechanism used by administrators and the subject of this section. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Installing Windows PowerShell |
Computers running Windows 7 or Windows 2008 R2 or later include Windows PowerShell 2.0 and Windows Remote Management (WinRM) 2.0. If you want to manage computers using earlier operating systems locally or remotely using Windows PowerShell, you will need to install both Windows PowerShell 2.0 and WinRM 2.0. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Using Windows PowerShell: The Basics |
Traditionally, administrating a server on which Microsoft products are installed has involved learning a number of administrator tools, such as graphical interfaces based on the Microsoft Management Console (MMC), known as MMC snap-ins; |
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SharePoint 2010 : Modify a View |
The easiest way to change a view is to switch to the view that you want to modify, and then click the view name in the breadcrumbs (in the Browse dialog) and choose Modify This View. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Create Mobile Views |
Today, many people have mobile phones and other small mobile devices capable of displaying websites. However, the size of a device’s screen and its resolution limits how much a user can see. |
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Uninstalling SharePoint 2010 |
There may come a time where you need to remove SharePoint 2010 from a server to allow that server to be used by another application. |
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Performing SharePoint 2010 Installations (part 3) |
The Standalone installation of SharePoint Foundation 2010 is quite similar to the same installation for SharePoint 2010 Standalone edition. The differences you will see during the installation itself are as follows. |
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Performing SharePoint 2010 Installations (part 2) |
In the second phase of a SharePoint 2010 Standalone installation, you are actually building and configuring your SharePoint farm using most of the default built-in options. Your configuration database, the Central Administration interface and its supporting database, and the service application are registered and started, and then their supporting databases are created. |
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