Chapter 1. Leveraging the power of SharePoint
Figure 1.1. The Office Ribbon is now included in SharePoint.
Figure 1.2. Media web part, which can be embedded in SharePoint pages
Figure 1.3. In-context collaboration lets you quickly collaborate with your peers.
Figure 1.4. Ratings configured for a document library
Figure 1.5. Hello World site that we’ll use as our first example of a SharePoint site
Figure 1.6. The Site Actions menu is found on all pages of a SharePoint site. Highlighted are two key links: View All Site Content and Site Permissions.
Figure 1.7. The All Site Content page is the hub for all content that you can use on your pages.
Figure 1.8. Site permissions groups and permission levels
Chapter 2. A deeper dive into SharePoint capabilities
Figure 2.1. SharePoint is an umbrella term, which can include one or more of the editions listed. It’s important to know what version you have in order to understand the functionality that’s accessible to you.
Figure 2.2. Logical structure for SharePoint. This diagram displays the breakdown of components and their hierarchical relationships. To start, users will access the World Wide Web or intranet, which connects to SharePoint servers. Hosted on those servers will be a series of site collections broken into subsites. Anything above the dotted line will be managed by your server administrator and networking team. This book covers the components that you can access below the dotted line.