by Wes Hackett | Jun 1, 2015 | Azure, Azure Active Directory, Development, Event, Featured, Office365, SharePoint, Sharepoint 2013, Social Features, SPEvo, Yammer
April 20th – 22nd 2015 saw London play host to SharePoint Evolutions conference. It was a great event organised with so many quality speakers and companies in attendance. It was a privilege to be invited to speak again. This year I had two sessions as you can...
by Wes Hackett | May 3, 2015 | Apps, Apps for Office, Featured, Office 2016 Preview, Office365
Microsoft announced the Office 2016 Preview Public Preview today during the Ignite Keynote. You can install the Office 2016 Preview from your Office 365 tenant. Browse to your Office 365 Settings from the context menu on the Suitebar like the screenshot below. From...
by Wes Hackett | Apr 9, 2015 | Featured, Office Online, Office365, Sharepoint 2013
There have been some subtle changes to the Office Online user experience in the past week or so. Office Online are the office applications such as Word, Excel and PowerPoint, they render a web based version which allows you to edit and read content directly within the...
by Wes Hackett | Jan 1, 2015 | Apps, Azure, Azure Active Directory, Development, Featured, Navigation, Office365
As we saw from the previous article Adding GitHub to the App Launcher the Office 365 user experience now incorporates the App Launcher as a persistent navigation element across the whole suite. Combine this with the Access Panel in Azure and you have two simple ways...
by Wes Hackett | Dec 31, 2014 | Apps, Azure, Azure Active Directory, Development, Featured, Office365
Lets start with a little background One of the latest features released to Office 365 and Azure was the ‘App Launcher’. This feature (Microsoft Announcement) provided a consistent menu of applications that can be launched by the user. Azure Active Directory now...
by Wes Hackett | Dec 23, 2014 | Best Practices, Featured, Office365, Sharepoint 2013
There is a frequently referenced part of Romeo and Juliet where Juliet seems to argue that it does not matter that Romeo is from her rival’s house of Montague, that is, that he is named ‘Montague’. The reference is often used to imply that the names...