"Fill In The Blank"

We've been plannin' this weekend for a week and a half
Hope you ain't thinkin' that we're movin' too fast
This trip can be whatever you want it to
I'll pick where we go and you can pick what we do
We could
In the water, in the truck
On a blanket 'til the sun comes up
With each other on the river bank
Yeah I'll leave it up to you, baby fill in the blank
I know a little spot thirty miles outta town
We can do what we want, won't be nobody around
I love hanging with your friends and your family too
But there's some things that only two people should do
We could
In the water, in the truck
On a blanket 'til the sun comes up
With each other on the river bank
Yeah I'll leave it up to you, baby fill in the blank
We could
In the water, in the truck
On a blanket 'til the sun comes up
With each other on the river bank
Yeah I'll leave it up to you, baby
We could
To some music real slow
'Til we can't no more
If the clouds roll in we could, in the rain
Yeah I'll leave it up to you, baby fill in the blank
Yeah the options are endless, baby fill in the blank
Oh Yeah

Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 is chock full of goodies for you to explore and leverage within your organization. When you start looking at all the functionality that SharePoint 2010 provides, you may —understandably — find yourself feeling a tad overwhelmed and frustrated. Probing at just one little area of the product reveals layer after layer of new features, making you feel like you just opened Pandora’s box.

Much of the new functionality emerges as services that can be consumed by your users, and SharePoint 2010 has lots of new services available right out of the box. For example, PerformancePoint Server used to be a standalone server offering from Microsoft, but with SharePoint 2010 it has been rolled up into the product and is now provided as one of the many service applications. Understanding what each service has to offer and knowing when and how to utilize it in your organization is the key to a successful SharePoint 2010 deployment. With SharePoint 2010 All–In–One For Beginner, we demystify the product

This blog is intended for SharePoint administrators who are responsible for deploying and managing SharePoint, and also for the technically savvy business users that want to get the most out of their organization’s SharePoint 2010 deployment.

Others who may benefit from this blog include:

✦ Developers: When it comes to building solutions for SharePoint 2010, writing code is typically a last resort. By understanding and knowing how to maximize the services that ship with SharePoint, developers can save themselves a lot of time and effort, and impress their managers by quickly producing solutions with very little underlying cost.

✦ Power Users: Since its inception SharePoint has always been a great technology for empowering the end user, and SharePoint 2010 is no exception. Technically savvy end users, also known as Power Users, will be eager to take advantage of all the goodies that SharePoint 2010 has in store for them, and knowing what those goodies are is half the battle.


✦ Business Decision Makers: If you are responsible for deciding whether your department should purchase SharePoint 2010, or for deciding whether to leverage an existing SharePoint 2010 implementation within your organization, then you need to understand what the product has to offer. SharePoint 2010 All-In-One For Beginner can help you do exactly that.
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