Sunday, December 11, 2011

SharePoint 2010 Developer Training Course

SharePoint 2010 provides the business collaboration platform for developers to rapidly build solutions using familiar tools while leveraging a rich set of out of the box features. Visual Studio 2010 and SharePoint Designer 2010 make developers more productive and Visual Studio Team Foundation Server delivers support for application lifecycle management. Developers can integrate Line of Business data in SharePoint 2010 with read/write capability delivered by Business Connectivity Services. Sandboxed Solutions can be deployed to a shared hosting environment to limit the impact of unpredictable code to the other applications in use.

Download link : http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?displayLang=en&id=6184
Source : http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/gg620703

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Service Pack 1 for Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 (KB2460045)


Service Pack 1 (SP1) for Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 contains new updates which improve security, performance, and stability. Additionally, the SP is a roll-up of all previously released updates.


Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Service Pack 1 for SharePoint 2010 Coming Soon…

  sharepointblog@live.com   
Author:  Bill Baer, Senior Technical Product Manager, Microsoft Corporation
As we near the release of Service Pack 1 in late June 2011 we wanted to take a moment to share some of the important new functionality that will be brought to SharePoint 2010 with Service Pack 1.  Service Pack 1 represents stability, performance, and security enhancements that are a direct result of your feedback and designed to extend the value you are experiencing with SharePoint 2010.  
 
At this time we’re ready to share some of these improvements and as we move closer to late June 2011 we’ll be providing additional insight into additional functionality and specific fixes.
 
Site Recycle Bin
Service Pack 1 will introduce long awaited Site Recycle Bin functionality that enables self-service recovery of site collections and sites.   In the past IT Professionals were tasked with restoring entire databases to recover deleted site collections and sites and would generally require expensive restore environments to support the task.  Now in Service Pack 1 administrators can quickly and easily recover site collections and sites accidentally deleted by their owners in a process similar to that of the Recycle Bin we have for Lists, Libraries, and Documents.
Shallow Copy
If you’re using Remote BLOB Storage you’ve probably realized that when moving Site Collections (Move-SPSite) between content databases each unit of unstructured data (BLOB) was round tripped (I.e. uploaded and subsequently downloaded again) serially during the move.  This operation was both time consuming and resource intensive.  In Service Pack 1 we reduce that overhead by enabling “shallow copy” when moving Site Collections between databases where Remote BLOB Storage is used.  New Shallow Copy functionality with the Move-SPSite CmdLet enables moving site collections between content databases without moving the underlying unstructured data, i.e. Microsoft Word documents, PowerPoint Presentations, etc. significantly increasing performance and reliability for organizations using Remote BLOB Storage by simply updating the pointers to those objects in the destination content database.
 
StorMan.aspx
In SharePoint 2010 we removed StorMan.aspx (Storage Space Allocation) (seehttp://support.microsoft.com/kb/982587/EN-US) which in previous versions of SharePoint enabled granular management and insight into storage.  For example, the page would show you the top 100 documents or document libraries in terms of size.  With that information end users could the page to clean up content from their site(s) by deleting the large content that they no longer needed.  In Service Pack 1 we are bringing back an improved StorMan.aspx, enabling users to better understand where their quota is going and act upon that information to reduce the size of their sites.
 
New enhancements will improve the way you interact with information in SharePoint 2010.  Service Pack 1 adds support for working with Office Web Applications using Internet Explorer 9 in native mode improving performance or with the Google Chrome browser (for a complete list of supported browsers for SharePoint 2010 see also http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc263526.aspx), support for Open Document Format documents, and more.
 
In addition to the new functionality Service Pack 1 provides, as with all Service Packs, it will include a number of fixes  designed to improve your experience with SharePoint 2010 and will include all Cumulative and Public Updates through the April 2011 Cumulative Update.
 
The data below is an accumulated list of all 2010 fixes that have already shipped.  These will be included in our Service Pack 1 release.  This is a combination of Cumulative Updates and Public Updates.  In addition to what is listed below, Service Pack 1 will contain more fixes in each product.  Between now and the time of release, we will publish more details about the coming changes.
Enjoy Service Pack 1.  We made it for you.
 
To keep informed with up to date Service Pack 1 information subscribe to the CAPES blog athttp://blogs.technet.com/b/office_sustained_engineering/.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

5 Apps That Bring SharePoint to the iPad


Find solutions specific to your industry or business needs at the Qwest Business Solution Center.
SharePoint logoEmployees may be bringing iPhones and iPads into work, but that doesn't take Microsoft out of the game. SharePoint is still a wildly popular enterprise platform. An InfoTech survey on enterprise collaboration last year found that 73% of its respondents were using SharePoint. Maybe new collaboration and knowledge sharing platforms will eventually displace it, but for now it's an enterprise standard. Here are a few ways you can access it from the iPad and other devices.

Filamente

Filamente screenshot
Filamente is a SharePoint client for iOS from Aircreek.  It gives users a touchscreen optimized interface for SharePoint, the ability to upload files from a mobile device and offline access to resources. It costs $12.99 in the App Store.

Forms Central

Forms Central screenshot
Formotus offers a SharePoint client for iOS, Android and Windows Mobile called Forms Central. Like Filamente, it provides offline access to SharePoint data. It's free to download, but requires a subscription.

Mobile Entree

Instead of a native app, H3 Solutions offers a SharePoint plugin called Mobile Entree that enables SharePoint administrators to create touchscreen optimized interfaces for their sites. We covered Mobile Entree here last week as part of our iPad for business round-up.

Moprise

Moprise screenshot
Moprise is an iOS SharePoint client. The free version allows users to view SharePoint documents, but not edit them. The paid version, which costs $5 a month per users, provides more features such as uploading new documents, and Quickoffice integration for editing. Moprise also offers customized installations.

SharePlus

SharePlus
SharePlus is an iOS SharePoint client from SouthLabs. The lite version allows users to view documents and send them by e-mail. Pro and enterprise editions provide additional features like offline syncing and list item editing.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Accessibility and SharePoint 2010


This is Tim McConnell, Program Manager on the SharePoint Foundation team. For the 2010 release, I’ve worked with SharePoint platform and partner teams to deliver powerful, reliable, accessible user experiences. Like OfficeOffice Web ApplicationsWindows, and teams across Microsoft, everyone in SharePoint strives to remove barriers that make software difficult to use. Sometimes improvements can be obvious, like the reorganized Ribbon user interface. However, some users may not notice changes that can transform another user’s experience. Accessible software respects the range of different users’ experiences, and it accommodates everyone.

Standards

As a starting point, SharePoint adopted the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0, WCAG 2.0, and set a goal for Level AA. Becoming a W3C recommendation on December 11th, 2008, WCAG 2.0 defines the expectations of and the techniques deployed in well-built, accessible Web sites. The SharePoint teams followed the spec’s developments, and we designed and tested SharePoint 2010 against the guidelines. WCAG 2.0 represents a modern, international standard that’s as valuable to developers as it is to Web users.

Core Investments

The four principles of WCAG 2.0 are Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, and Robust. For each area, SharePoint has made key investments, and here I’ll scratch the surface to describe a few:

Perceivable

  • SharePoint 2010 delivers broad changes to describe content and media and to explain controls.
  • The redesigned masterpage leverages CSS and presents content in the appropriate sequence.

Operable

  • Keyboard interaction has been a cornerstone in our feature evaluations to maximize device compatibility and usability.
  • Proper heading structures have been added to pages for informational, organizational, and navigational benefits.
  • Core to a trustworthy interface is a dependable focus, and we’ve invested heavily in protecting the users focus and in deferring control to the user agent wherever possible.

Understandable

  • Across SharePoint, we’ve improved language support, and we’ve integrated this information into our pages and into our advanced editors.
  • SharePoint supports browser settings to zoom content and operating system features to increase font sizes.

Robust

  • Our new design efforts let us declare DocTypes and specify CSS-standards rendering for our masterpages. This has dramatically improved our cross-browser support.
  • Broad investments were made to update our markup to be like well-formed XML, and the new rich text editor has clean markup and a function to convert its content into XHTML.
We’ve tested these principles with and without Assistive Technologies to verify their value for all users.

ARIA Integration

ARIA stands for Accessible Rich Internet Applications, and it specifies descriptive extensions for Web applications. Like WCAG, WAI-ARIA is from the W3C’s Web Accessibility Initiative. In a nutshell, ARIA allows an inaccessible element, such as a div with an onclick attribute, to surface itself as a button control. This can be done with a newrole attribute set to “button”—it’s that simple. SharePoint leverages ARIA in the Ribbon, in dialogs, in our new rich text editor, and elsewhere in the platform and in partner applications.

Examples of Accessibility Investments

Dialogs

In order to keep users in context for as long as possible, we’ve introduced in-browser dialogs. With a dialog, the experience of reading, editing, and creating SharePoint content moves more quickly. Since SharePoint dialogs do not open new browser windows, we’ve built in important accessibility features to help all users navigate successfully.
  1. Focus: SharePoint describes its dialogs using multiple accessible techniques, and form dialogs will set focus on the first form element like they would after a navigation event.
  2. Dismissing a dialog: depending on how a browser implements Access Keys, closing the dialog is a couple of key strokes away. For example, in Internet Explorer, a user can hit Alt+C to disregard a dialog; in Firefox users can hit Alt+Shift+C.
  3. Confirming a dialog: when the necessary forms have been filled, users can hit Alt+O to accept the dialog or to submit the form.
A New Page Dialog

The Ribbon

As the key component of the new SharePoint 2010 user interface, the Ribbon needs to deliver powerful, useful, and usable experience. We designed the Ribbon to be accessible from the beginning, and we took advantage of multiple tools and techniques to provide a rich experience.

Keyboard Support

Keyboard support comes from the ground up. Because the Ribbon is a complicated component, it has a simple link to skip all of its commands. To help users on keyboards and alternative input devices, the Ribbon provides hidden, in-context instructions that explain its structure and how it’s controlled. Each of the Ribbon’s commands and menu anchors appear within the page’s navigation order, so it’s always safe to explore either forwards or backwards.

Tab Access

Because the Ribbon appears at the top of SharePoint pages, it’s necessary to provide quick access. The Ribbon operates as a central control for all of the components on the page, so it’s impractical to navigate back and forth for every command. To accelerate Ribbon interaction, a new shortcut key combination, Ctrl+[, will jump the focus to the first available Ribbon tab. From there, users can move back toward the Quick Access Toolbar commands and the Site Actions menu, or users can move ahead to the other Ribbon tabs.
In the following picture, the Browse tab has been highlighted to demonstrate focus after entering the Ctrl+[ shortcut key combination.
Tab Access in the Ribbon

Command Access

Similar to accessing Tabs, it’s also important to quickly access commands. For this SharePoint supports the Ctrl+]shortcut key combination. This shortcut works in one of two ways:
  1. It selects the first command on the active Ribbon Tab.
  2. It selects the last used command on the active Ribbon Tab.
To move between Groups of Ribbon commands enter one of the Ctrl+Arrow LeftCtrl+Arrow RightShift+Arrow Left, or Shift+Arrow Right shortcut key combinations. These shortcuts will loop through the Groups to prevent users from accidentally navigating outside of the Ribbon. The shared use of Ctrl and Shift allows for maximum browser and Assistive Technology compatibility.
Command Access in the Ribbon

Enhanced Tooltips

Enhanced tooltips describe a command’s behavior and its availability without cluttering the user interface or slowing navigation. When trying to decipher small icons or to move between many rich commands, enhanced tooltips provide the extra bit of information needed to verify your actions.
Enhanced Tooltips in the Ribbon

ARIA Integration

Behind the scenes in each of the three Ribbon examples are ARIA role attributes describing the structure and purpose of the Ribbon controls. Here’s a short list of attributes:
  • aria-labelledby – Rich control labels
  • aria-describedby – Rich control descriptions via enhanced tooltips
  • aria-haspopup – Notification information to warn when a control may pop-up another control
  • aria-multiline – Describes text fields for large amounts on content
  • And here’s a short list of ARIA roles used within SharePoint:
  • tabpanel – An expanded Ribbon Tab
  • tooltip – Ribbon tooltip content
  • button – An interactive button control
  • dialog – An interactive dialog
Each of these simple strings dramatically changes how browsers and Assistive Technologies communicate Web content to users. While a basic a anchor tag will work for most basic command scenarios, it’s better and more reassuring to fully provide ARIA’s role=”button” syntax for clear descriptions.

InfoPath Forms

Through investments made in InfoPath Forms Services 2010, form designers can easily design and publish forms with an accessible user experience.
An InfoPath browser form snippet

Assistive Technology Friendly

InfoPath forms have been designed and tested to work with browsers and assistive technologies. Broad changes have been made to describe simple controls and complex controls with field validation and relationships.

ARIA Integration

WAI-ARIA has been used to further improve the user experience on assistive technologies: ARIA is used to notify the assistive technology of form updates, alerts, warnings, and other pop-up dialogs.

Keyboard Support

Users filling forms in IPFS 2010 have full keyboard support to access all necessary functionality. InfoPath has also done work to ensure that keyboard focus is maintained in a predictable manner during dynamic changes to the form.

Project Grid Editing

The ability to display and edit tabular data is a core component of any productivity suite. SharePoint is no exception. In SharePoint Foundation 2010 we have introduced a new JavaScript based grid control that allows users to modify SharePoint Project Tasks Lists, change Project schedules, and edit Access databases. From the very early planning stages of developing this control we began to craft requirements to ensure the control was accessible. The control has complex requirements around the support of Gantt Charts and hierarchy (for Project Server) as well as very large datasets, macros and custom user validation (for Access Services). In order to ensure accessibility for these features we made use of ARIA and robust keyboard shortcuts.
The Project Grid

ARIA Integration

Like the Ribbon, ARIA is used to achieve support for these complex requirements. Here are additional examples of how Project uses ARIA:
  • aria-owns – enables focus element to be set in a input element that maps to the entire control
  • aria-activedescendant – enables virtual focus element to map to a specific cell within the grid
  • aria-multiselectable – indicates that multiple cell selections can be made
  • aria-expanded – indicate expand/collapse state within hierarchy
  • aria-busy – indicates if a row has not yet been downloaded from the server

Keyboard Navigation

SharePoint’s Grid control was designed to support keyboard navigation from day one. We know that frequently when dealing with tabular data whether it is datasheets, lists or projects, users often have many items to display on screen. Because of this we provide a simple link that allows users to skip the grid when moving through elements on a page. Additionally the Grid supports many of the keyboard shortcuts you have come to expect in desktop applications. Cell navigation can be easily performed by using directional arrow keys as well as traditional tabbing. Moving up and down within grid is easy with common shortcuts like Page Up/Page Down as well as support for Home/End and many others. Support is even present for complex selection and expanding dropdowns (Alt+Down). In Project Server the control supports changing Gantt chart zoom levels all through a couple keypresses (CTRL+* & CTRL+/), as well as expanding and collapsing hierarchy.

Conclusion

Thanks for learning more about the investments that we’ve made to make SharePoint an exceptional, versatile, and accessible web application and platform. Web technologies move quickly, and we’re always seeking new ways to present dynamic Web experiences that work for everyone. We’re proud of the richness that we’ve delivered, and we hope that you’ll discover SharePoint 2010 to be both powerful and usable.

Monday, April 04, 2011

My Post on The SharePoint Buzz Daily homepage


The SharePoint Buzz Daily is one of the best SharePoint news sites, added my MVP post in its homepage, this is really great, so proud




Sunday, April 03, 2011

SharePoint MVP for the 5th year in a row


Dears Friends,
                Great news, I’ve been re-awarded Microsoft MVP award in SharePoint for the 5th time in a row.

This year has different taste specially after our revolution in Egypt which makes me very proud of my country.

Here is part of the mail that I got

Dear Shady Khorshed,

Congratulations! We are pleased to present you with the 2011 Microsoft® MVP Award! This award is given to exceptional technical community leaders who actively share their high quality, real world expertise with others. We appreciate your outstanding contributions in SharePoint Server technical communities during the past year.


 Thanks Microsoft for this award , you made my day

Tuesday, March 01, 2011

MVP Global Summit first day

Today we had the first day at MVP Global Summit located in Microsoft main campus , Redmond.

Unfortunately all sessions under NDA even photography not allowed so i won't be able to share any information but wish to be able soon if we got permission from Microsoft.

Monday, January 10, 2011

All the SharePoint MVP’s in the World

Great effort from Veronique Palmer to list all SharePoint MVPs , I updated the list by adding Mohamed Yehia from Egypt

By Country

CountryName
1ArgentinaDaniel Alfredo Seara
2AustraliaBrian Farnhill
3AustraliaChris O’Connor
4AustraliaDaniel William Brown
5AustraliaEd Richard
6AustraliaElaine van Bergen
7AustraliaIshai Saqi
8AustraliaIvan Wilson
9AustraliaJames Milne
10AustraliaJeremy Thake
11AustraliaKathy Hughes
12AustraliaMichael Nemtserv
13BelgiumJoris Poelmans
14BelgiumLudovic Lefort
15BelgiumSebastien Sougnez
16BelgiumStephane Eyskens
17BrazilHelio Sa Moreira
18BrazilThiago Cruz Soares
19CambodiaSampath Nadeeshan Perera
20CanadaAlain Lord
21CanadaAmanda Perran
22CanadaBil Simser
23CanadaBil Brockbank
24CanadaEd Musters
25CanadaEli Robilliard
26CanadaJason Kaczor
27CanadaJohn White
28CanadaKanwal Khipple
29CanadaNick Kellett
30CanadaReza Alirezaie
31CanadaRob Windsor
32CanadaRuven Gotz
33CanadaSean Wallbridge
34CanadaSerge Tremblay
35CanadaStephen Cawood
36CanadaYaroslav Pentsarskyy
37ChileHector Insua
38ChileJuan Andres Valenzuela
39ChileRicardo Jose Munoz
40ChinaShuguang Tu
41China?Baowei Guo
42China?Jing Ma
43China?Joseph Tu
44China?Oifeng Zhao
45China?Xiaofeng Wang
46China?Xizhang Chen
47CroatiaToni Frankola
48Czech RepublicKamil Jurik
49DenmarkCarsten Keutmann
50Denmark?Cornelius van Dyk
51EgyptAyman Mohammed El Hattab
52EgyptMarwan Tarek
53EgyptMohamed Zaki
54EgyptShady Khorshed
54EgyptMohamed Yehia
55FranceAugusto Simoes
56FranceFabrice Barbin
57FranceGaetan Bouveret
58FranceJean-Michel Davault
59FranceNicolas Georgeault
60FrancePatrick Guimonet
61FrancePhillippe Sentenac
62FrancePierre Vivier-Merle
63FrancePierre Erol Giraudy
64FranceRenaud Comte
65FranceXavier Vanneste
66GermanyDaniel Wessels
67GermanyFabian Moritz
68GermanyMichael Greth
69Germany?Christian Glessner
70GreecePanagiotis Kanavos
71HungaryAgnes Molnar
72IndiaAshok Hingorani
73IndiaRajesh Sitaraman
74IndiaSohel Rana
75IndonesiaAgusto Xavier Sipahutar
76IsraelItay Shakury
77ItalyClaudio Brotto
78ItalyGiuseppe Marchi
79ItalyIgor Macori
80ItalyRomeo Pruno
81JapanAi Yamasaki
82JapanAtsuo Yamasaki
83JapanFurnio Mizobata
84JapanHiroaki Oikawa
85JapanKazuhiko Nakamura
86JapanSatoru Kitabata
87JapanYoashiaki Nishita
88JordanMohammed A Saleh
89JordanMuhanad Omar
90KoreaJimHo Baek
91KoreaWon Bae Kim
92Korea?Hoyeon Kim
93LuxemborgDidier Danse
94Malaysia?Patrick Yong
95MexicoHaaron Gonzalez
96NetherlandsMarianne van Wanrooij
97NetherlandsMirjam van Olst
98NetherlandsRobin Meure
99NetherlandsTon Stegeman
100NetherlandsWaldek Mastykarz
101NetherlandsWouter van Vugt
102New CaledoniaJulien Chable
103New ZealandChakkaradeep Chandran
104New ZealandChandima Kulathilake
105New ZealandDebbie Ireland
106New ZealandMark Orange
107New ZealandSharad Kumar
108PakistanKhalil ur Rehman Khan
109PakistanMuhammad Imran Khawar
110PakistanRazi Bin Rais
111PhillipinesElczar Peralta Adame
112PolandJakub Gutkowski
113PortugalAndre Lage
114RomaniaValy Greavu
115RussiaAleksandr Chervyak
116RussiaAlexander Romanov
117RussiaAnton Lavrov
118RussiaIvan Padabed
119RussiaOksana Prostakova
120RussiaRouslan Grabar
121Russia?Natalya Voskresenkaya
122Saudi ArabiaYasier Attiq Butt
123SingaporeLoke Kit Kai
124SingaporeRiwut Libinuko
125SingaporeSarbjit Singh Gill
126SingaporeSteve Sofian
127South AfricaVeronique Palmer
128SpainAlberto Diaz Martin
129SpainDavid Martos
130SpainJuan Carlos Gonzalez Martin
131SpainRuven Alonso Cebrian
132Sri LankeJoy Rathnayake
133SwedenGoran Husman
134SwedenTobias Zimmergren
135SwedenWictor Wilen
136SwitzerlandChristoph Muller
137SwitzerlandFabrice Romelard
138TaiwanJimy Cao
139TaiwanPeter Yu
140TurkeyEmre Balci
141TurkeyEvren Ayan
142UKAlex Pearce
143UKAndrew Woodward
144UKArno Nel
145UKBen Robb
146UKChris O’Brien
147UKDave Hunter
148UKDave McMahon
149UKJohn Timney
150UKKevin Laahs
151UKNick Swan
152UKPenelope Coventry
153UKSpencer Harbar
154UKSteve Smith
155UkraineSergey Belskiy
156United Arab EmiratesMajid Ardforoushan
157United Arab EmiratesZlatan Dzinic
158UruguayFabian Imaz
159USAAdam Robert Buenz
160USAAndrew Connell
161USAAsif Rehmani
162USABecky Bertram
163USABecky Isserman
164USABen Curry
165USABil English
166USABryan Phillips
167USACorey Roth
168USADan Holme
169USADarrin Bishop
170USADavid Mann
171USADux Raymond Sy
172USAEric Shupps
173USAGary Lapointe
174USAIvan Sanders
175USAJake Dan Attis
176USAJohn Ross
177USAJohn Holliday
178USAKris Wagner
179USALiam Cleary
180USAMarc Anderson
181USAMatt Ranlett
182USAMatthew McDermott
183USAMichael Noel
184USAMike Orsyszak
185USAMike Smith
186USAPaul Schaeflein
187USAPaul Galvin
188USAPaul Papenek Stork
189USARandy Drisqill
190USARandy Williams
191USARob Foster
192USARobert L Boque
193USASahil Malik
194USAScot Hillier
195USAShane Young
196USASteve Curran
197USASuprivo Chatterjee
198USATed Pattison
199USATodd Bleeker
200USATodd Baginski
201USATodd Klindt
202USAUdayakumar Ethirajulu
203USAWes Preston
204USA?Maurice Prather
205USA?Woodrow Windischman
206VietnamBasquang Nguyen
207?Gustavo Adolfo Velez Duque
208?Jeong Woo Choi
209?Jovi Ku
210?Juan Larios
211?Juan Manual (Manolo) Herrera
212?Maxim Kozlenko
213?Saifullah Shafiq Ahmed
214? (Belgium)Serge Luca
215?Wei Du

Alphabetical by First Name

NameCountry
1Adam Robert BuenzUSA
2Agnes MolnarHungary
3Agusto Xavier SipahutarIndonesia
4Ai YamasakiJapan
5Alain LordCanada
6Alberto Diaz MartinSpain
7Aleksandr ChervyakRussia
8Alex PearceUK
9Alexander RomanovRussia
10Amanda PerranCanada
11Andre LagePortugal
12Andrew ConnellUSA
13Andrew WoodwardUK
14Anton LavrovRussia
15Arno NelUK
16Asif RehmaniUSA
17Ashok HingoraniIndia
18Atsuo YamasakiJapan
19Augusto SimoesFrance
20Ayman Mohammed El HattabEgypt
21Baowei GuoChina?
22Basquang NguyenVietnam
23Becky BertramUSA
24Becky IssermanUSA
25Ben CurryUSA
26Ben RobbUK
27Bil SimserCanada
28Bil BrockbankCanada
29Bil EnglishUSA
30Brian FarnhillAustralia
31Bryan PhillipsUSA
32Carsten KeutmannDenmark
33Chakkaradeep ChandranNew Zealand
34Chandima KulathilakeNew Zealand
35Chris O’BrienUK
36Chris O’ConnorAustralia
37Christian GlessnerGermany?
38Christoph MullerSwitzerland
39Claudio BrottoItaly
40Corey RothUSA
41Cornelius van DykDenmark?
42Dan HolmeUSA
43Daniel WesselsGermany
44Daniel Alfredo SearaArgentina
45Daniel William BrownAustralia
46Darrin BishopUSA
47Dave HunterUK
48Dave McMahonUK
49David MannUSA
50David MartosSpain
51Debbie IrelandNew Zealand
52Didier DanseLuxemborg
53Dux Raymond SyUSA
54Ed MustersCanada
55Ed RichardAustralia
56Elaine van BergenAustralia
57Elczar Peralta AdamePhillipines
58Eli RobilliardCanada
59Emre BalciTurkey
60Eric ShuppsUSA
61Evren AyanTurkey
62Fabian ImazUruguay
63Fabian MoritzGermany
64Fabrice BarbinFrance
65Fabrice RomelardSwitzerland
66Furnio MizobataJapan
67Gaetan BouveretFrance
68Gary LapointeUSA
69Giuseppe MarchiItaly
70Goran HusmanSweden
71Gustavo Adolfo Velez Duque?
72Haaron GonzalezMexico
73Hector InsuaChile
74Helio Sa MoreiraBrazil
75Hiroaki OikawaJapan
76Hoyeon KimKorea?
77Igor MacoriItaly
78Ishai SaqiAustralia
79Itay ShakuryIsrael
80Ivan PadabedRussia
81Ivan SandersUSA
82Ivan WilsonAustralia
83Jake Dan AttisUSA
84Jakub GutkowskiPoland
85James MilneAustralia
86Jason KaczorCanada
87Jean-Michel DavaultFrance
88Jeong Woo Choi?
89Jeremy ThakeAustralia
90Jing MaChina?
91JimHo BaekKorea
92Jimy CaoTaiwan
93John TimneyUK
94John RossUSA
95John HollidayUSA
96John WhiteCanada
97Joris PoelmansBelgium
98Joseph TuChina?
99Jovi Ku?
100Joy RathnayakeSri Lanke
101Juan Larios?
102Juan Andres ValenzuelaChile
103Juan Carlos Gonzalez MartinSpain
104Juan Manual (Manolo) Herrera?
105Julien ChableNew Caledonia
106Kamil JurikCzech Republic
107Kanwal KhippleCanada
108Kathy HughesAustralia
109Kazuhiko NakamuraJapan
110Kevin LaahsUK
111Khalil ur Rehman KhanPakistan
112Kris WagnerUSA
113Liam ClearyUSA
114Loke Kit KaiSingapore
115Ludovic LefortBelgium
116Majid ArdforoushanUnited Arab Emirates
117Marc AndersonUSA
118Marianne van WanrooijNetherlands
119Mark OrangeNew Zealand
120Marwan TarekEgypt
121Matt RanlettUSA
122Matthew McDermottUSA
123Maurice PratherUSA?
124Maxim Kozlenko?
125Michael GrethGermany
126Michael NemtservAustralia
127Michael NoelUSA
128Mike OrsyszakUSA
129Mike SmithUSA
130Mirjam van OlstNetherlands
131Mohamed YehiaEgypt
131Mohamed ZakiEgypt
132Mohammed A SalehJordan
133Muhammad Imran KhawarPakistan
134Muhanad OmarJordan
135Natalya VoskresenkayaRussia?
136Nick KellettCanada
137Nick SwanUK
138Nicolas GeorgeaultFrance
139Oksana ProstakovaRussia
140Panagiotis KanavosGreece
141Patrick GuimonetFrance
142Patrick YongMalaysia?
143Paul SchaefleinUSA
144Paul GalvinUSA
145Paul Papenek StorkUSA
146Penelope CoventryUK
147Peter YuTaiwan
148Phillippe SentenacFrance
149Pierre Vivier-MerleFrance
150Pierre Erol GiraudyFrance
151Oifeng ZhaoChina?
152Rajesh SitaramanIndia
153Randy DrisqillUSA
154Randy WilliamsUSA
155Razi Bin RaisPakistan
156Renaud ComteFrance
157Reza AlirezaieCanada
158Ricardo Jose MunozChile
159Riwut LibinukoSingapore
160Rob FosterUSA
161Rob WindsorCanada
162Robert L BoqueUSA
163Robin MeureNetherlands
164Romeo PrunoItaly
165Rouslan GrabarRussia
166Ruven Alonso CebrianSpain
167Ruven GotzCanada
168Sahil MalikUSA
169Saifullah Shafiq Ahmed?
170Sampath Nadeeshan PereraCambodia
171Sarbjit Singh GillSingapore
172Satoru KitabataJapan
173Scot HillierUSA
174Sean WallbridgeCanada
175Sebastien SougnezBelgium
176Serge LucaBelgium
177Serge TremblayCanada
178Sergey BelskiyUkraine
179Shady KhorshedEgypt
180Shane YoungUSA
181Sharad KumarNew Zealand
182Shuguang TuChina
183Sohel RanaIndia
184Spencer HarbarUK
185Stephane EyskensBelgium
186Stephen CawoodCanada
187Steve CurranUSA
188Steve SmithUK
189Steve SofianSingapore
190Suprivo ChatterjeeUSA
191Ted PattisonUSA
192Thiago Cruz SoaresBrazil
193Tobias ZimmergrenSweden
194Todd BleekerUSA
195Todd BaginskiUSA
196Todd KlindtUSA
197Ton StegemanNetherlands
198Toni FrankolaCroatia
199Udayakumar EthirajuluUSA
200Valy GreavuRomania
201Veronique PalmerSouth Africa
202Waldek MastykarzNetherlands
203Wei Du?
204Wes PrestonUSA
205Wictor WilenSweden
206Won Bae KimKorea
207Woodrow WindischmanUSA?
208Wouter van VugtNetherlands
209Xavier VannesteFrance
210Xiaofeng WangChina?
211Xizhang ChenChina?
212Yaroslav PentsarskyyCanada
213Yasier Attiq ButtSaudi Arabia
214Yoashiaki NishitaJapan
215Zlatan DzinicUnited Arab Emirates
Source : http://veroniquepalmer.wordpress.com/2011/01/08/all-the-sharepoint-mvps-in-the-world/