SUBSCRIBE to Windows IT Pro Magazine & SAVE 30%     Register today for your FREE 'To The Point' SharePoint eNewsletter
     
     
Skip Navigation Links.
Collapse Office and SharePointOffice and SharePoint
Collapse Newsletter ArchivesNewsletter Archives
Making Document Libraries More Accessible: Scripting Network Places and Network Locations
An Overview of SharePoint Pro Online Live!
Expand SharePoint Backup Strategies SharePoint Backup Strategies
October 16, 2007
Introducing Office and SharePoint Pro
Windows SharePoint Services and Windows Server File for Divorce
What Do You Think? New Products and Addons Forums
Use Kerberos to Secure MOSS 2007
The SharePoint Capacity Planning Tool
Service Packalooza
SharePoint News for the New Year
SharePoint Migration Secrets
SharePoint Replication
Windows Server 2008 and Windows Vista SP1: What They Mean to SharePoint
SharePoint and Forms-based Authentication
The SharePoint Permissions Model
Microsoft Online Services Offers SharePoint to Businesses of All Sizes
SharePoint: What Do YOU Think?
STSADM at Your Service
Adding Templates for Top-Level Sites
Taking the Pulse of the SharePoint Community
Big News on the Collaboration Front from Telligent
SharePoint Report Card: Search
Report from the Microsoft MVP Summit 2008
Summary of SharePoint Scenario Report Cards
Got Yahoo!? I’m so sorry.
Implementing Folder Content Types
License to Fill: Licensing Windows SharePoint Services for the Extranet
Licensing Windows SharePoint Services
News from Tech Ed, Installing WSS on Vista—a Rave and Rant, and More
Tech Ed 2008 Wrap-Up
Great Stuff
MOSS 2007 Applications in the Business World
Microsoft Online Makes a Big Splash in the Services Pool
Comparing InfoPath and SharePoint Designer Forms
Comparing InfoPath and SharePoint Designer Forms, Part 2
Migrating Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 to a Different Server
Microsoft Office SharePoint Server and Excel Services
SharePoint Sharing from Beijing
Olympics Diary
SharePoint’s Role in Bringing the Games to the Web
Email-Enabling SharePoint Document Libraries and Lists
Back to Reality
SharePoint's "Big" Problems
If You Build It Right, They Will Come
Deploying Shortcuts and Favorites to SharePoint Sites
SharePointers
Easy Answers about Document Libraries (Part I): Overriding Check Out
Spiral Development, the 80/20 Rule and SharePoint
SharePoint Calendar Tips
Sharepoint Futures
Excel Services and Excel Integration with SharePoint
My Migration to Microsoft Online
SharePoint Online's Debut
A Microsoft Online Report Card
Links, Links Everywhere...
Creating a Custom Advanced Search by Building Strings with JavaScript
If Steve Ballmer Were Santa, and I Were on His Lap
MVP Predictions for 2009
Expand Office 2007Office 2007
Expand Office 2003Office 2003
Expand SharePointSharePoint
Announcements
     

     

     
     

SharePoint’s Role in Bringing the Games to the Web
ToTheSharePoint Newsletter
August 18, 2008


Dan Holme

Office & SharePoint Pro
Community Manager

SharePoint’s Role in Bringing the Games to the Web

So, did CorasWorks Global Navigation you get any sleep this weekend? Did you get any work done? If not, I apologize if we played a role in distracting you with the dramatic weekend of events from Beijing. It has been a phenomenal first week, marked with incredible triumphs of spirit and athleticism and a couple of gorgeous days here at the Olympics. I’ve been very busy at work but have managed to stick my head into a couple of events, so it’s been a fantastic week for me.

And have you checked out NBCOlympics.com? That’s the website where you can watch live and edited events from the Games if you’re in the United States. If you haven’t been there yet—go look! There are hundreds of hours of video content on the site, much of which is also available as streams to your mobile devices. I also stumbled across a wickedly cool plug in at TVTonic which brings the NBCOlympics.com video directly into Vista’s Media Center. Amazing.

Behind this historic push of Olympic events onto the web is some very interesting technology. To get all that content to all the right media outlets, a dedicated video distribution application takes video packages and delivers or streams them. A large amount of metadata accompanies each package—metadata that varies per outlet. For example, the “Title” field can be long on Amazon.com, but must be short for mobile (MMS) delivery.

Additionally, editors must be assigned to create the packages. To make it possible for mere mortals to enter all this data, before and during the Games, we needed a user-friendly interface that exposes just the right data, performs data validation, ensures that required fields are completed, then transforms all this information into the XML file required by the video distribution application. Once again, SharePoint came to the rescue.

We built the UI—the form—by using Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007, which allows us to embed the business logic into the form so that when an editor works on metadata for a specific package, the only fields that appear are those needed by the appropriate outlets. The form also makes sure the data complies with the data type and content expectations of the video distribution application.

So that we don’t have to deploy the InfoPath client on our systems, we’re using InfoPath Forms Services, a feature of Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS) 2007 Enterprise Edition, to render the forms in users’ browsers. When a form is saved, the data is stored in a SharePoint list, and a custom application page uses a workflow to publish the data to the XML format that the video distribution application requires. This application is a fairly straightforward solution to build on top of SharePoint, taking two smart folks from NetFusion, a Microsoft Gold Partner, less than two weeks to create. It would have taken months without thefunctionality that InfoPath and MOSS provided. Olympic Rings

On top of the list that manages all of this metadata, we’ve created custom views that allow editors, producers, and management to perform their responsibilities related to the process. We even have a small Access application for one user that produces well-formatted, hard-copy work assignments using Access reports. Once again, SharePoint has proven its ability to play a major role in a rapid-deploy solution for collaboration and workflow! So if you watch any of the Games on a device other than a television, know that SharePoint helped it get to you.

Until next week, all the best!

Dan Holme
danh at intelliem dot (top level commercial domain)


Editor's Note: Help Us Help You
We’re putting the finishing touches on content for our upcoming SharePoint roadshows in September and October, and we want to be sure we’re covering your most important issues with SharePoint. What keeps you up at night? What have been the biggest pain points with implementing SharePoint? We want to hear from you! Visit http://ct.email.officesharepointpro.com/rd/cts?d=33-12370-1004-0-5811-1286171-0-0-0-3-2-196, and scroll down to Reader Comments to tell us what we can help you with.

 


Events and Resources

Latest Advancements in SSL Technologies
Learn the benefits of strong Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) encryption, Extended Validation SSL, and security trust marks and what these offerings can do for your site--read this white paper on the latest advances in SSL technologies.

Cross-platform SOA Performance Management
Live Web Seminar on September 9, 2008, 12:00 PM EDT. Quit working double-time--focus on a common tool that works across platforms. A common problem with the sophisticated tools that monitor service-oriented architecture (SOA) end-user transactions is the lack of visibility to the entire transaction path and supporting infrastructure. A further complication is the likelihood that some element of any given transaction will cross platform boundaries involving both .NET and J2EE resources. Join Mel Beckman for this live web seminar as he discusses the value of a single solution that works for both platforms.

Build a Strong, Feature-Rich SharePoint Farm
This fall industry experts will present best practices regarding infrastructure, design, forms configurations, and redundancy. You'll get helpful tips on the critical and often overlooked considerations in setting up your SharePoint architecture. Join SharePoint experts Wendy Henry and Michael Noel for this information-packed technical training in 8 U.S. cities (see website for details). Register by August 29th to save $100 off the price at the door.

It's not enough to be efficient on your home turf--Go Mobile!
Successful enterprises understand that knowledge workers must be able to do their jobs from more than one location. Going mobile can improve productivity, reduce costs, and boost your bottom line. It's important to consider exactly how mobile applications will fit into your business activities. This white paper will provide you with a list of considerations you need to think about as you develop your mobility plan.

Got SharePoint? Get Specialized Training!
Whether you're an IT pro or a developer, master SharePoint with help from the world's most respected SharePoint experts in three SharePoint workshops built just for you and presented straight from your desktop! On September 30 and October 1, Windows IT Pro and OfficeSharePointPro.com bring SharePoint MVPs Dan Holme, Michael Noel, and Andrew Connell direct to you to share their real-world perspective, experience, and expertise and help you build a better SharePoint infrastructure, develop more effective SharePoint applications, and enable more powerful collaboration. Choose the info-packed sessions that are right for you.

Access Expert SharePoint Solutions for only $5.95!
With the online Monthly Pass, you can have all the SharePoint solutions in Windows IT Pro right at your fingertips, including access to the more than 10,000 articles in our content archives! You'll also receive a full digital copy of the latest issue of Windows IT Pro!


Office & SharePoint Pro | Penton Media | 249 W. 17th Street | New York, NY 10011 | Privacy Policy