August 14, 2011 - 13:00, by Dostalek, Kevin
Thanks to everyone that came out for my session at SharePoint Saturday "The Conference" that took place this past week in Washington, DC.
I only did one session this year, entitled, Creating a Custom Gatherer for the SharePoint 2010 Activity Feed. As promised you can download a hi-res image version of the 3D-animated mindmap that was used in the presentation by clicking the thumbnail below:

In addition here is the Visual Studio project for the Twitter Gatherer Timer Job. And lastly, here are links to some of the resources we talked about during the session:
The conference itself was pretty epic. 200+ sessions over 3 days time with experts from all around the world. As always my favorite part of attending one of these conferences is interacting with everyone. It was great catching up with old friends and meeting loads of new ones! The SharePoint community is so special and it's amazing to see people sharing their "art" with each other. It doesn't matter if you are hanging out with an SP rockstar or just someone that is passionate about their work-- it such a cool opportunity to learn, grow, and of course SHARE.
In the geek-irony category, I thought it was hillarious that a group of us ended up at a bar/club one night down in DC called "The Frontpage".
Thanks to everyone that made the conference possible, especially the organizers- they did an amazing job!
July 1, 2011 - 11:00, by Dostalek, Kevin
I recently began using a service called greplin which has changed the way I search for things in all my “life streams”. Since I did a few optimizations I wanted to give a quite review of the service and then also share with all my readers some tips that I think can make it work even better.
Before I get into greplin, use this link to access it: https://www.greplin.com/r/c/738522
That is somewhat of an “affiliate link”, though NO money is involved. It’s just my personal “refer a friend” link which earns both YOU and me “unlock credits” (as opposed to if you just go to http://greplin.com).
What is It?
Ok, so greplin basically lets you attach various data sources such as Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIN, Dropbox, Gmail, Evernote, etc… and it builds a personal index of all of them for you (that only you can access of course). Then whenever you want to find something, you just search from their page (which pretty much looks like a blue version of google) and you get all of your results grouped by (and filterable by) result type (people, messages, streams, files, etc…) as well as data source. It has all the cool AJAXy enhancements too like immediate results as you type and result refiners (facets) to narrow your results.
When you get started, you just add in your data sources and it starts the indexing process. It seemed like wherever it was possible they used oAuth (or a variant, like Facebook connect), so they wouldn’t actually be storing your username/password, though I think there were a few where it might have. All my data sources were a snap to set up, though when I first added my Gmail account it seemed to hang up on indexing. I later figured out that this was just because I use my Gmail account to send canary emails to myself at my home-based email server every 5 minutes, and Gmail had stored all of these “sent items” – about 150k of them (ha!). After I deleted all of those (which only took about 2 minutes in Gmail) things were much better. I’m presently indexing Facebook, Twitter, Dropbox, LinkedIN, and 2 Gmail accounts. It says it’s currently indexing 20336 documents for me (always changing of course).
Though I’m only using the “free” index data sources, they also have available other sources that are “unlockable” which you get for free once you invite enough people and earn “unlock credits”. Then there are “premium” data sources such as Google Apps, 37Signals Apps, Salesforce, Yammer, and Evernote that you need a paid account for (at the time of this writing it is $5/mo or $50/yr). That’s too bad about Evernote, because I do use it heavily, but I don’t know if I can justify $5/mo to search it when I can search it for free elsewhere.
A Few Tips
If you use Google Chrome as your browser, install the greplin extension. Not only does it add a little icon that lets you do quick searches, but it adds a shortcut in your address bar so that if you type g[space] (that is the g key followed by the spacebar) you can type your greplin search right in the address bar. For those of you that don’t know it, you can do the same thing for a google search by typing g[tab].
If you have multiple Gmail accounts this is the perfect solution for being able to search across them. After you add in your first Gmail data source just make sure you log out of Gmail completely in your browser so that when you go back to add the second (and third, etc…) it prompts you for another login instead of just connecting you to the one you’ve already added. Also make sure that your Gmail accounts have IMAP enabled, but that you aren’t using the quirky “Advanced IMAP Controls” Lab mode.
If you want to use this on your mobile device, they have done a pretty good job with autodetecting and redirecting a mobile version of the search/results page which is very nice. If you use an iPhone, while there is no App (yet), you can make your own by doing the following:
- Navigate to greplin.com – it will open in mobile mode.
- Scroll to the bottom and click the link to switch to standard view
- Pinch zoom all the way into the upper left corner so that all you see on the screen is the greplin logo (the cloud) centered or slightly below centered.
- Click the share button (bottom center) then choose “Add to Home Screen”
- Close browser. You should now see an app with the greplin logo on the Springboard. Click it (touch it?) greplin should open up in mobile mode again. If for some reason it isn’t, just scroll to the bottom and choose mobile version. It should stay in that mode from there forward.
Now you have a quick way of accessing your personal search engine from your iPhone! How cool is that?
May 9, 2011 - 23:00, by Dostalek, Kevin
Hey all! I've been needing to do some work on the blog here for awhile, and since it looks like I'm about to get very busy starting tomorrow I figured I better try and sneak it in tonight!

I've had to chnage out the comment engine again. This time to the new Facebook comment plugin. I know this may be an unpopular move and I *really* liked Echo (the last comment engine we had), but the price had jumped from $12 a year to $120, and I couldn't relly justify that since I only had about 100 comments last year anyway. I will miss the cool way it pulled in stuff from Twitter and Friendfeed automatically, but it seemed like the best discussions were either directly "on the site" (no social networks) or Facebook.
So anyway, try out the new comments widgets... it's just like facebook. Cool thing is if you allow it to post through to facebook as well, then any comments your friends make on the post will also show up here on the blog (don't worry, it makes it clear whats happening when they reply).
Unfortunately, this also means that every post on The Kickboard now has 0 comments. That kind of hurts, but since I've been so bad at posting over the last 6 months or so anyway, it doesn't hurt nearly as much as it might. Please let me know if you notice something not working right!
October 17, 2010 - 14:46, by Dostalek, Kevin
I had a great time this weekend in Chicago at the SharePoint Saturday event held at McCormick Place. It's always a blast to catch up with old friends and meet some new ones- and this being my first time presenting up in Chicago (other than some AIIM events) I did get to meet quite a few new folks.
The event organizers did an awesome job from the pre-communication leading up to the event (I think this was pulled together in just over a month), the speaker dinner, and at the event itself. It was also a great new experience for me presenting in a "real" conference center / convention hall.
I had a great time in my session- the audience was great and it seemed pretty effortless. Lots of good questions too. So here are the resources as promised from the session on Social Computing with SharePoint 2010. I've included the mindmap that was used during the presentation (in large pannable graphic format) as well as a slidedeck version, which may be easier for some to read-- just click on the appropriate thumbnail below.

Also, since we didn't have detailed session evaluations, I'd love to hear any feedback from those that came! Thanks Chicago-- I'll be back next week (next time for pleasure)!
June 14, 2010 - 13:56, by Dostalek, Kevin
Seems like I keep getting behind on posting these (at least every other one-- then I catch up by posting two :) Anyway a few weeks back I did a presentation here in Indianapolis for the
Indy TechFest. I had a great audience both in size, over 50, and in makeup-- almost everyone there was a developer, which is a first for me when giving this DEV presentation. This time around I did my "Leveraging SharePoint 2010 as a Social Computing Development Platform" session, and it was the first time that I presented it on the RTM bits (and it all worked! yey!).
As usual, I didn't do slides, only a mindmap, which can be
downloaded here. If you'd like the sample code, read my blog posts from
SPS Charlotte and
nSpin as they have a link and some pointers as how to get it all to work.
Thanks to the event organizers, sponsors, volunteers, and attendees (especially all of you that came to my session!) for a great day!