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I'm new to SharePoint and I'm looking for resources to exemplify a good layout for a project management oriented site. I've made a Project site, but that's as far as I've gotten. Has anyone run across any good resources for this?
If you've started with a Project Site, your Task List and Calendar are going to do quite a bit for you. There's a few options you'll want to turn on, such as the Timeline in the Task List. Dig around your available Apps and experiment with what you see. You'll likely need a List for something, so check out custom lists while you're experimenting (they operate a bit like an Excel spreadsheet).
Since you're new to SharePoint, you might consider looking for O'Reilly's Information Architecture for the World Wide Web. If you'll be doing much more site design, that book will help you determine what sites need and how they should be organized. It's a fantastic book and not difficult to read, although the second half of the book is pretty specific to coded web design, which isn't what SharePoint is for new users.
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I'm wondering, if there is Axure RP alternative for a better price. I used other apps, but ended with Axure RP because of two fundamental advantages:
it's not only wireframe tool, but it lets me prototype whole web/app with functional demonstrations
it generates/exports prototype and customers can easily try personaly (it's HTML site and i upload it to my server and clients just get email with link to follow)
So, is there anything else like Axure RP meeting my two criteria with better price? All apps i've seen mainly fail in second condition.
Yes - atomic.io lets you do both of these things.
You can go from low fidelity, right up to fully functioning prototypes that use things like logic, data, and variables.
You can also easily share an URL with anyone. (see: https://atomic.io/learn/sharing)
And there is a free plan. :-)
atomic.io
You can use moqups.com , it's a web app.
it lets you to make prototypes with linked pages and more .
also it lets you to share your Design through a URL on its site.
There are a ton of prototyping tools.
https://www.cooper.com/prototyping-tools
It always depends on what your main goal to achieve is.
Justinmind (https://www.justinmind.com) is very close to Axure.
If you do not mind sharing your prototypes you can look into a bunch of different tools that are webbased (i.e. https://www.figma.com)
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recently, I got interested in an assignment, which was to deassemble a program and crack the password in it. and i remember that I enjoyed trying sql injection to a security problem given by a friend.
I wonder if there's a site with cracking problem sets or competing with others. but I wasn't able to find one for hours of searching.
thank you
Code bashing teaches the skills, but can't really compete with others, and is a commercial site: https://www.codebashing.com
Secure code warrior is also a commercial site. It teaches the skills and allows you to compete with others from your organisation: https://new-www.securecodewarrior.com
OSCP is commercial, teaches you how to do network pentesting, and has a number of challenge systems for you to hack into. Really fun and insightful, and if you commit yourself, you may end up with one of the best certifications in the industry. But it is a huge time commitment.
There are lots of free places to practice and learn, such as web goat (downloadable tool), Altoro mutual (pretend bank site, easy to hack into), crypto pals (learn to crack cryptography), bodgeit store (similar to web goat), etc....
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At the moment we are a small development team of 2. All our software is used inhouse. Currently staff just walk to our desk when they want new software developed or when they want new features added to existing software, or when bugs arise.
I am looking for a better management process of this. Do I get staff to send an email instead and then that can be designated to a developer. Or is there a simple software app out there that could help?
I want a simple method for doing this as the staff are unlikely to use something if too time consuming or complex. They find it too easy to approach a developer personally!
Anything to recommend please?
One option is to use JIRA. It has a feature where emails sent to a certain address can get turned in to backlog items (using the email subject line as the title).
Keep it as it is for now: face-to-face communication is always better than using any piece of software...
It will be only when you will grow to more developers that you will really need such software: from online or cloud based (ie Zimbra) to VCSs (version control systems) hosted on your machines.
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I'm looking to set up a small site for a friend that has some widgets they want to sell online. I don't think I will have much time for maintenance once it goes live (for that matter, I don't expect I'll have much time for initial setup and configuration), and I am looking for something that is dead-simple for a non-technical user to maintain (financial/payment info, add/remove/change products).
The second most important part would be good integration with a payment provider. I'm not too fussy what language it's in if it meets my other criteria (if I don't know the language I will learn enough to get the site running).
Also important is that I'd prefer to stick to open-source products, mostly because I don't think this project will have much of a budget for high-end commercial products (at least not until it makes some sales).
The last time I did this sort of stuff we were building custom sites from scratch for clients with very specific needs. I do not have recent experience with the current generation of blogging tools (Wordpress, Joomla, etc...) and I don't really know which off-the-shelf combo of platforms and plugins are best to get something up and running in as little time as possible.
Hosting your own online store is a full-time occupation, no different from running your own brick-and-mortar store. Anything that accepts online payments will be targeted by criminals for online fraud.
If your business is selling widgets and not running online stores, I strongly, strongly suggest using a hosted service with its own web integration and payment handling. I know people who have used both Weebly and Etsy and who are happy with them.
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Does anyone know of a bug tracking piece of software that has community based features like rep, friends, badges and community based voting?
I'm looking for a hybrid of uservoice, stackoverflow and bugzilla. Does such a beast exist?
A commercial offering is Get Satisfaction which offers a similar service. Their main selling point is to encourage your users to help other users, with the ability for your staff to intervene and help. It also integrates with your web application.
See the "what it is" page - I would post a link but it redirects you if you follow a link from here.
Part feedback system, part community engine, completely different than anything you've had a chance to test with your customers.
14,000 companies. Thousands of employees participating in conversations. Millions of users. What gives?