In the wake of our coverage of last month's SharePoint Conference sessions, this is the fourth in a series of posts documenting the keynotes and sessions I attended at the Microsoft "Airlift" event for Office 2010. This four-day event took place in Seattle during the first week of June, was open to participants in Microsoft's Technical Adoption Program (TAP), and in essence took the form of a mini-SharePoint Conference. Donna Shaw and Paul Cannon presented the session on the integration of SharePoint Workspace (formerly known as Groove) with the 2010 offering. Not surprisingly, it was announced that integration with SharePoint was the major investment with this release, and SharePoint Workspace was described as being "the desktop model of the SharePoint server." Donna also stated that, "if you're comfortable working in a SharePoint site, you should be comfortable working in a Workspace." Feature highlights demonstrated during the session included:
The ability to take all SharePoint content (or a designated subset thereof) offline Auto-sync of lists and librari ...Read the full article