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| Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services I have a small group who wish to share a notebook using a hosted Sharepoint Services group, such as epidirect.com or sharepointsite.com. I have created free trial accounts on both hosting sites. I have accounts at both sites, and have yet to be able to create a shared site. I am using Windows Vista, OneNote 2007 (part of Office 2007). I have installed all available updates to the Office suite. I also have tried this from an XP machine. Going through the steps, I select Share->Create Shared Notebook... This opens the New Notebook Wizard. I enter the name of by notebook (FRC). I select the shared notebook - Group project template. Click next. The 'Who will use this notebook' question is answered 'Multiple people will share the notebook' and 'On a server (Sharepoint document library, etc). Click next. The Confirm notebook location dialog box appears. In the path, I type my sharepoint site name ( http://xxxxxx.wss.epidirect.com ). At this point, if I click Browse as suggested by the dialog box, it will ask for my password, then it hangs for a little while. It then opens up a select folder dialog of my local machine. Not what I expected. If, instead of clicking browse, I just click Create, I get the message 'The location for this notebook: http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ does not exist. Do you want to create it?' I click yes. After a substantial delay, an error message is generated: 'OneNote cannot create a new notebook at http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ Possible reasons include: - The specified location is not available - You do not have permissions to modify the specified location - The path or notebook name contains invalid characters - The combined path and notebook name exceeds the maximum path length. Adjust the path and notebook name, and then try again.' I have tried this on XP and on Windows Vista. Both epidirect.com and sharepointsite.com are running SharePoint 3.0. From reading through this help site, it appears that this rather major feature of OneNote is just broken and does not work. Is that a fair summary? Has anyone managed to share a notebook over the internet without having to jump through a bunch of impossible hoops? Its a shame, since it is the sole reason I upgraded to Office 2007. Thanks Kevin |
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| Re: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services Can you successfully create a folder at that SharePoint site without using OneNote? I have to caution you that OneNote shared folders on a SharePoint site are likely to be...ummm...sub-optimal in terms of performance. Any chance you could just use a regular file sharing site instead of a SharePoint service? (probably be cheaper too) -- -Ben- Ben M. Schorr, MVP Roland Schorr & Tower http://www.rolandschorr.com http://www.officeforlawyers.com/onenote.htm "Kevin Ross" <KevinRoss@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:34A924AF-2932-4035-9249-55B146BE4CD0@microsoft.com... >I have a small group who wish to share a notebook using a hosted Sharepoint > Services group, such as epidirect.com or sharepointsite.com. I have > created > free trial accounts on both hosting sites. > > I have accounts at both sites, and have yet to be able to create a shared > site. I am using Windows Vista, OneNote 2007 (part of Office 2007). I have > installed all available updates to the Office suite. I also have tried > this > from an XP machine. > > Going through the steps, I select Share->Create Shared Notebook... This > opens the New Notebook Wizard. > > I enter the name of by notebook (FRC). I select the shared notebook - > Group > project template. Click next. > > The 'Who will use this notebook' question is answered 'Multiple people > will > share the notebook' and 'On a server (Sharepoint document library, etc). > Click next. > > The Confirm notebook location dialog box appears. In the path, I type my > sharepoint site name ( http://xxxxxx.wss.epidirect.com ). At this point, > if I > click Browse as suggested by the dialog box, it will ask for my password, > then it hangs for a little while. It then opens up a select folder dialog > of > my local machine. Not what I expected. > > If, instead of clicking browse, I just click Create, I get the message > 'The > location for this notebook: http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ does not > exist. Do you want to create it?' I click yes. After a substantial delay, > an > error message is generated: > > 'OneNote cannot create a new notebook at > http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ > > Possible reasons include: > - The specified location is not available > - You do not have permissions to modify the specified location > - The path or notebook name contains invalid characters > - The combined path and notebook name exceeds the maximum path length. > > Adjust the path and notebook name, and then try again.' > > I have tried this on XP and on Windows Vista. Both epidirect.com and > sharepointsite.com are running SharePoint 3.0. > > From reading through this help site, it appears that this rather major > feature of OneNote is just broken and does not work. Is that a fair > summary? > Has anyone managed to share a notebook over the internet without having to > jump through a bunch of impossible hoops? > > Its a shame, since it is the sole reason I upgraded to Office 2007. > > Thanks > Kevin > |
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| Re: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services Thanks, Ben. Yes, if I log in to the sharepoint site using the a web browser, I have full functionality for making folders, etc. I can't think of a decent way to use regular file sharing in this instance. We are spread across 3 states and 12 cities. Most of the team are not very technically endowed. That was the whole reason that Sharepoint was created in the first place, right? I am sure some collection of setting up VPN's, satellite dishes, backup servers, generators, and fiber optic switches can be assembled to make it go. However, we are interested in working on our project, not doing a bunch of IT debugging for something that should work as advertised. (disappointment flame not aimed at you of course! thanks for your reply) On my internal network, OneNote works great. On my local machine, best thing since sliced bread. On the internet, kaput. Sounds like a feature that is just flat broken to me. Hopefully someone knows otherwise? Kevin "Ben M. Schorr, MVP" wrote: > Can you successfully create a folder at that SharePoint site without using > OneNote? > |
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| Re: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services You don't necessarily need all of that. A simple Internet file-sharing service, similar to the SharePoint services you've looked at, that lets you map to a URL location to read/write files would do just fine. It should be as accessible as the SharePoint services just won't have all of the pretty UI and SharePoint overhead. Something like this, perhaps: http://www.box.net/g/?gclid=CNyS-ve8h44CFRKyYAod5GP52Q -- -- -Ben- Ben M. Schorr, MVP Roland Schorr & Tower http://www.rolandschorr.com http://www.officeforlawyers.com/onenote.htm "Kevin Ross" <KevinRoss@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:FD45CA89-3A9E-4415-865F-8D6E8BD62BB2@microsoft.com... > Thanks, Ben. > > Yes, if I log in to the sharepoint site using the a web browser, I have > full > functionality for making folders, etc. > > I can't think of a decent way to use regular file sharing in this > instance. > We are spread across 3 states and 12 cities. Most of the team are not very > technically endowed. That was the whole reason that Sharepoint was created > in > the first place, right? > > I am sure some collection of setting up VPN's, satellite dishes, backup > servers, generators, and fiber optic switches can be assembled to make it > go. > However, we are interested in working on our project, not doing a bunch of > IT > debugging for something that should work as advertised. (disappointment > flame > not aimed at you of course! thanks for your reply) > > On my internal network, OneNote works great. On my local machine, best > thing > since sliced bread. On the internet, kaput. > > Sounds like a feature that is just flat broken to me. Hopefully someone > knows otherwise? > > Kevin > > > "Ben M. Schorr, MVP" wrote: > >> Can you successfully create a folder at that SharePoint site without >> using >> OneNote? >> > |
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| Re: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services Thanks for the suggestion. I have looked into these website storage systems before. The nice thing about OneNote is it was supposed to take care of all the file syncing/copying automatically. The scenario for something like Box is exactly what I was trying to avoid by using OneNote/Sharepoint. If OneNote/Sharepoint worked as advertised, then the confusion I need to introduce on the rest of my team goes away. The files just appear. Them having to manually reconcile changes is just bad. Trying to explain to 15 people how to reconcile changes in files and how to keep them up to date just doesn't work. We are better off sticking with Google or yahoogroups instead. Non technical folks understand email for the most part. The Google stuff just works correctly, though it is cumbersome. The disappointment is that this product claims to be exactly what my team (and lots of other teams) wanted. It is so close to doing the right thing. I guess I was expecting the Microsoft product to work correctly! Silly me. As a former Microsoft design engineer (worked on Windows and OS/2), I find the fact that this doesn't work completely unacceptable and rather embarrassing. If you put something in a Wizard, in your advertising, and on the front of the boxed product, you would think it would work correctly. Somewhere in Redmond there is a program manager who needs to get fired for incompetence. Somewhere in Redmond is a product support group who hasn't fixed an advertised feature after being released 7 months ago. Very bad. Again, Ben, thanks so much for your reply, I aim none of this at you! "Ben M. Schorr - MVP" wrote: > You don't necessarily need all of that. A simple Internet file-sharing > service, similar to the SharePoint services you've looked at, that lets you > map to a URL location to read/write files would do just fine. It should be > as accessible as the SharePoint services just won't have all of the pretty > UI and SharePoint overhead. > > Something like this, perhaps: > http://www.box.net/g/?gclid=CNyS-ve8h44CFRKyYAod5GP52Q > |
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| Re: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services I think you're still misunderstanding me, Kevin. :-) The notebook sharing, with automatic sync, works just fine (in fact better) on a file share. Nobody has to manually reconcile anything. I have a 6 person team running shared OneNote notebooks to a plain 'ole file share and everything syncs up beautifully. You don't need SharePoint for that to work. I don't know why the Internet SharePoint site isn't working for you, but honestly performance is a lot better on a regular (non-SharePoint) file share anyhow so if you can go that route it makes it not only a simpler solution but a faster one too. We can try and troubleshoot the SharePoint connection and maybe we could get it to work. It does work for a lot of folks. I'm just saying that if you can avoid that and go with a regular Internet file sharing service it'll be simpler and better and I think you'll be much happier. -- -Ben- Ben M. Schorr, MVP Roland Schorr & Tower http://www.rolandschorr.com http://www.officeforlawyers.com/onenote.htm "Kevin Ross" <KevinRoss@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:A7B98CB7-8C80-4F68-A814-DA381E748FFB@microsoft.com... > Thanks for the suggestion. > > I have looked into these website storage systems before. The nice thing > about OneNote is it was supposed to take care of all the file > syncing/copying > automatically. The scenario for something like Box is exactly what I was > trying to avoid by using OneNote/Sharepoint. If OneNote/Sharepoint worked > as > advertised, then the confusion I need to introduce on the rest of my team > goes away. The files just appear. Them having to manually reconcile > changes > is just bad. Trying to explain to 15 people how to reconcile changes in > files > and how to keep them up to date just doesn't work. We are better off > sticking > with Google or yahoogroups instead. Non technical folks understand email > for > the most part. The Google stuff just works correctly, though it is > cumbersome. > > The disappointment is that this product claims to be exactly what my team > (and lots of other teams) wanted. It is so close to doing the right thing. > > I guess I was expecting the Microsoft product to work correctly! Silly me. > As a former Microsoft design engineer (worked on Windows and OS/2), I find > the fact that this doesn't work completely unacceptable and rather > embarrassing. If you put something in a Wizard, in your advertising, and > on > the front of the boxed product, you would think it would work correctly. > Somewhere in Redmond there is a program manager who needs to get fired for > incompetence. Somewhere in Redmond is a product support group who hasn't > fixed an advertised feature after being released 7 months ago. Very bad. > > Again, Ben, thanks so much for your reply, I aim none of this at you! > > "Ben M. Schorr - MVP" wrote: > >> You don't necessarily need all of that. A simple Internet file-sharing >> service, similar to the SharePoint services you've looked at, that lets >> you >> map to a URL location to read/write files would do just fine. It should >> be >> as accessible as the SharePoint services just won't have all of the >> pretty >> UI and SharePoint overhead. >> >> Something like this, perhaps: >> http://www.box.net/g/?gclid=CNyS-ve8h44CFRKyYAod5GP52Q >> > |
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| Re: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services How does one setup an internet file share to work like this? All of the services I have seen involve having to manually upload a file to a server. Is there one that allows us to treat it as a mapped drive instead? Box, for example, appears to require a manual upload using a web browser. Thanks Kevin "Ben M. Schorr, MVP" wrote: > I think you're still misunderstanding me, Kevin. :-) > > The notebook sharing, with automatic sync, works just fine (in fact better) > on a file share. Nobody has to manually reconcile anything. I have a 6 > person team running shared OneNote notebooks to a plain 'ole file share and > everything syncs up beautifully. > > You don't need SharePoint for that to work. I don't know why the Internet > SharePoint site isn't working for you, but honestly performance is a lot > better on a regular (non-SharePoint) file share anyhow so if you can go that > route it makes it not only a simpler solution but a faster one too. > > We can try and troubleshoot the SharePoint connection and maybe we could get > it to work. It does work for a lot of folks. I'm just saying that if you > can avoid that and go with a regular Internet file sharing service it'll be > simpler and better and I think you'll be much happier. > > > -- > -Ben- > Ben M. Schorr, MVP > Roland Schorr & Tower > http://www.rolandschorr.com > http://www.officeforlawyers.com/onenote.htm > > > "Kevin Ross" <KevinRoss@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:A7B98CB7-8C80-4F68-A814-DA381E748FFB@microsoft.com... > > Thanks for the suggestion. > > > > I have looked into these website storage systems before. The nice thing > > about OneNote is it was supposed to take care of all the file > > syncing/copying > > automatically. The scenario for something like Box is exactly what I was > > trying to avoid by using OneNote/Sharepoint. If OneNote/Sharepoint worked > > as > > advertised, then the confusion I need to introduce on the rest of my team > > goes away. The files just appear. Them having to manually reconcile > > changes > > is just bad. Trying to explain to 15 people how to reconcile changes in > > files > > and how to keep them up to date just doesn't work. We are better off > > sticking > > with Google or yahoogroups instead. Non technical folks understand email > > for > > the most part. The Google stuff just works correctly, though it is > > cumbersome. > > > > The disappointment is that this product claims to be exactly what my team > > (and lots of other teams) wanted. It is so close to doing the right thing. > > > > I guess I was expecting the Microsoft product to work correctly! Silly me. > > As a former Microsoft design engineer (worked on Windows and OS/2), I find > > the fact that this doesn't work completely unacceptable and rather > > embarrassing. If you put something in a Wizard, in your advertising, and > > on > > the front of the boxed product, you would think it would work correctly. > > Somewhere in Redmond there is a program manager who needs to get fired for > > incompetence. Somewhere in Redmond is a product support group who hasn't > > fixed an advertised feature after being released 7 months ago. Very bad. > > > > Again, Ben, thanks so much for your reply, I aim none of this at you! > > > > "Ben M. Schorr - MVP" wrote: > > > >> You don't necessarily need all of that. A simple Internet file-sharing > >> service, similar to the SharePoint services you've looked at, that lets > >> you > >> map to a URL location to read/write files would do just fine. It should > >> be > >> as accessible as the SharePoint services just won't have all of the > >> pretty > >> UI and SharePoint overhead. > >> > >> Something like this, perhaps: > >> http://www.box.net/g/?gclid=CNyS-ve8h44CFRKyYAod5GP52Q > >> > > > |
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| Re: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services You just need a file share that you can map to. You don't necessarily have to map a drive letter if you can use a URL or IP address to save. DigitalDaze and others offer file shares that you can map a letter to or access via URL. There is also a product called WebDrive (which I haven't tried personally) which purports to let you map a drive letter a web address - so you could map to any URL you have permissions for. Here's an article that seems on-point: http://www.futureofrealestatetechnol...-the-internet/ -- -Ben- Ben M. Schorr, MVP Roland Schorr & Tower http://www.rolandschorr.com http://www.officeforlawyers.com/onenote.htm "Kevin Ross" <KevinRoss@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:3C1B4BDE-D5E2-4852-A54B-695F9AFDB746@microsoft.com... > How does one setup an internet file share to work like this? All of the > services I have seen involve having to manually upload a file to a server. > Is > there one that allows us to treat it as a mapped drive instead? Box, for > example, appears to require a manual upload using a web browser. > > Thanks > Kevin > > "Ben M. Schorr, MVP" wrote: > >> I think you're still misunderstanding me, Kevin. :-) >> >> The notebook sharing, with automatic sync, works just fine (in fact >> better) >> on a file share. Nobody has to manually reconcile anything. I have a 6 >> person team running shared OneNote notebooks to a plain 'ole file share >> and >> everything syncs up beautifully. >> >> You don't need SharePoint for that to work. I don't know why the >> Internet >> SharePoint site isn't working for you, but honestly performance is a lot >> better on a regular (non-SharePoint) file share anyhow so if you can go >> that >> route it makes it not only a simpler solution but a faster one too. >> >> We can try and troubleshoot the SharePoint connection and maybe we could >> get >> it to work. It does work for a lot of folks. I'm just saying that if >> you >> can avoid that and go with a regular Internet file sharing service it'll >> be >> simpler and better and I think you'll be much happier. >> >> >> -- >> -Ben- >> Ben M. Schorr, MVP >> Roland Schorr & Tower >> http://www.rolandschorr.com >> http://www.officeforlawyers.com/onenote.htm >> >> >> "Kevin Ross" <KevinRoss@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message >> news:A7B98CB7-8C80-4F68-A814-DA381E748FFB@microsoft.com... >> > Thanks for the suggestion. >> > >> > I have looked into these website storage systems before. The nice thing >> > about OneNote is it was supposed to take care of all the file >> > syncing/copying >> > automatically. The scenario for something like Box is exactly what I >> > was >> > trying to avoid by using OneNote/Sharepoint. If OneNote/Sharepoint >> > worked >> > as >> > advertised, then the confusion I need to introduce on the rest of my >> > team >> > goes away. The files just appear. Them having to manually reconcile >> > changes >> > is just bad. Trying to explain to 15 people how to reconcile changes in >> > files >> > and how to keep them up to date just doesn't work. We are better off >> > sticking >> > with Google or yahoogroups instead. Non technical folks understand >> > for >> > the most part. The Google stuff just works correctly, though it is >> > cumbersome. >> > >> > The disappointment is that this product claims to be exactly what my >> > team >> > (and lots of other teams) wanted. It is so close to doing the right >> > thing. >> > >> > I guess I was expecting the Microsoft product to work correctly! Silly >> > me. >> > As a former Microsoft design engineer (worked on Windows and OS/2), I >> > find >> > the fact that this doesn't work completely unacceptable and rather >> > embarrassing. If you put something in a Wizard, in your advertising, >> > and >> > on >> > the front of the boxed product, you would think it would work >> > correctly. >> > Somewhere in Redmond there is a program manager who needs to get fired >> > for >> > incompetence. Somewhere in Redmond is a product support group who >> > hasn't >> > fixed an advertised feature after being released 7 months ago. Very >> > bad. >> > >> > Again, Ben, thanks so much for your reply, I aim none of this at you! >> > >> > "Ben M. Schorr - MVP" wrote: >> > >> >> You don't necessarily need all of that. A simple Internet >> >> file-sharing >> >> service, similar to the SharePoint services you've looked at, that >> >> lets >> >> you >> >> map to a URL location to read/write files would do just fine. It >> >> should >> >> be >> >> as accessible as the SharePoint services just won't have all of the >> >> pretty >> >> UI and SharePoint overhead. >> >> >> >> Something like this, perhaps: >> >> http://www.box.net/g/?gclid=CNyS-ve8h44CFRKyYAod5GP52Q >> >> >> > >> |
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| Re: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services Kevin, I use a UK based ISP for SharePoint services and it works fine for me... I note you didn't create the location on the site first before saving your notebooks? Therefore, as a test please create a folder location on your site before hand - this is your collaborative area. Then try and save your notebooks to it directly. I think this should do the trick! Regards, Andrew www.workshares.co.uk |
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| Re: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services I use Hamachi. It's free, it's very easy to set up, and it literally acts as a VPN between multiple physically distributed computers across the internet. The upside to this is that not only OneNote Notebooks become easier to share, but so does anything. You can browse file shares, share printers, use Windows Media sharing, remote desktop and assistance, and basically do anything else that requires two people to be on the same network. http://www.hamachi.cc -- Josh Einstein (Tablet PC MVP) Einstein Technologies Tablet Enhancements for Outlook - Try it free: www.tabletoutlook.com "Kevin Ross" <KevinRoss@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:FD45CA89-3A9E-4415-865F-8D6E8BD62BB2@microsoft.com... > Thanks, Ben. > > Yes, if I log in to the sharepoint site using the a web browser, I have > full > functionality for making folders, etc. > > I can't think of a decent way to use regular file sharing in this > instance. > We are spread across 3 states and 12 cities. Most of the team are not very > technically endowed. That was the whole reason that Sharepoint was created > in > the first place, right? > > I am sure some collection of setting up VPN's, satellite dishes, backup > servers, generators, and fiber optic switches can be assembled to make it > go. > However, we are interested in working on our project, not doing a bunch of > IT > debugging for something that should work as advertised. (disappointment > flame > not aimed at you of course! thanks for your reply) > > On my internal network, OneNote works great. On my local machine, best > thing > since sliced bread. On the internet, kaput. > > Sounds like a feature that is just flat broken to me. Hopefully someone > knows otherwise? > > Kevin > > > "Ben M. Schorr, MVP" wrote: > >> Can you successfully create a folder at that SharePoint site without >> using >> OneNote? >> > |
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| RE: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services Kevin, I've been trying to do the same thing as you and received the same problem. Two things helped - first I finally figured out that Vista does not support making the connection to SharePoint via Webdav unless it is using SSL (where you have the https:// rather than just http://). I signed up for Sharepoint hosting on the 1and1 service and they offer the ability to purchase and install an SSL certificate which makes it use https://. Secondly, I also installed the Webfolders fix for Vista which can be found here: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en It seems to work okay, but still new for me (still testing). In particular, I'm trying to figure out now how to open the Notebook that was created in the SharePoint Document Library while I am not connected (the offline copy).... Overall I think OneNote 2007 is a fantastic tool - what I always wanted (I was a user of ECCO, Agenda, MyBase, etc.). But the sharing/synch stuff REALLY needs some more thorough documentation. I imagine there are not many people using it via the Internet. Best of luck, -- Thanks, Brent Phillips "Kevin Ross" wrote: > I have a small group who wish to share a notebook using a hosted Sharepoint > Services group, such as epidirect.com or sharepointsite.com. I have created > free trial accounts on both hosting sites. > > I have accounts at both sites, and have yet to be able to create a shared > site. I am using Windows Vista, OneNote 2007 (part of Office 2007). I have > installed all available updates to the Office suite. I also have tried this > from an XP machine. > > Going through the steps, I select Share->Create Shared Notebook... This > opens the New Notebook Wizard. > > I enter the name of by notebook (FRC). I select the shared notebook - Group > project template. Click next. > > The 'Who will use this notebook' question is answered 'Multiple people will > share the notebook' and 'On a server (Sharepoint document library, etc). > Click next. > > The Confirm notebook location dialog box appears. In the path, I type my > sharepoint site name ( http://xxxxxx.wss.epidirect.com ). At this point, if I > click Browse as suggested by the dialog box, it will ask for my password, > then it hangs for a little while. It then opens up a select folder dialog of > my local machine. Not what I expected. > > If, instead of clicking browse, I just click Create, I get the message 'The > location for this notebook: http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ does not > exist. Do you want to create it?' I click yes. After a substantial delay, an > error message is generated: > > 'OneNote cannot create a new notebook at > http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ > > Possible reasons include: > - The specified location is not available > - You do not have permissions to modify the specified location > - The path or notebook name contains invalid characters > - The combined path and notebook name exceeds the maximum path length. > > Adjust the path and notebook name, and then try again.' > > I have tried this on XP and on Windows Vista. Both epidirect.com and > sharepointsite.com are running SharePoint 3.0. > > From reading through this help site, it appears that this rather major > feature of OneNote is just broken and does not work. Is that a fair summary? > Has anyone managed to share a notebook over the internet without having to > jump through a bunch of impossible hoops? > > Its a shame, since it is the sole reason I upgraded to Office 2007. > > Thanks > Kevin > |
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| RE: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services Kevin, I've been trying to do the same thing as you and received the same problem. Two things helped - first I finally figured out that Vista does not support making the connection to SharePoint via Webdav unless it is using SSL (where you have the https:// rather than just http://). I signed up for Sharepoint hosting on the 1and1 service and they offer the ability to purchase and install an SSL certificate which makes it use https://. Secondly, I also installed the Webfolders fix for Vista which can be found here: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en It seems to work okay, but still new for me (still testing). In particular, I'm trying to figure out now how to open the Notebook that was created in the SharePoint Document Library while I am not connected (the offline copy).... Overall I think OneNote 2007 is a fantastic tool - what I always wanted (I was a user of ECCO, Agenda, MyBase, etc.). But the sharing/synch stuff REALLY needs some more thorough documentation. I imagine there are not many people using it via the Internet. Best of luck, -- Thanks, Brent Phillips "Kevin Ross" wrote: > I have a small group who wish to share a notebook using a hosted Sharepoint > Services group, such as epidirect.com or sharepointsite.com. I have created > free trial accounts on both hosting sites. > > I have accounts at both sites, and have yet to be able to create a shared > site. I am using Windows Vista, OneNote 2007 (part of Office 2007). I have > installed all available updates to the Office suite. I also have tried this > from an XP machine. > > Going through the steps, I select Share->Create Shared Notebook... This > opens the New Notebook Wizard. > > I enter the name of by notebook (FRC). I select the shared notebook - Group > project template. Click next. > > The 'Who will use this notebook' question is answered 'Multiple people will > share the notebook' and 'On a server (Sharepoint document library, etc). > Click next. > > The Confirm notebook location dialog box appears. In the path, I type my > sharepoint site name ( http://xxxxxx.wss.epidirect.com ). At this point, if I > click Browse as suggested by the dialog box, it will ask for my password, > then it hangs for a little while. It then opens up a select folder dialog of > my local machine. Not what I expected. > > If, instead of clicking browse, I just click Create, I get the message 'The > location for this notebook: http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ does not > exist. Do you want to create it?' I click yes. After a substantial delay, an > error message is generated: > > 'OneNote cannot create a new notebook at > http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ > > Possible reasons include: > - The specified location is not available > - You do not have permissions to modify the specified location > - The path or notebook name contains invalid characters > - The combined path and notebook name exceeds the maximum path length. > > Adjust the path and notebook name, and then try again.' > > I have tried this on XP and on Windows Vista. Both epidirect.com and > sharepointsite.com are running SharePoint 3.0. > > From reading through this help site, it appears that this rather major > feature of OneNote is just broken and does not work. Is that a fair summary? > Has anyone managed to share a notebook over the internet without having to > jump through a bunch of impossible hoops? > > Its a shame, since it is the sole reason I upgraded to Office 2007. > > Thanks > Kevin > |
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| RE: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services Kevin, I've been trying to do the same thing as you and received the same problem. Two things helped - first I finally figured out that Vista does not support making the connection to SharePoint via Webdav unless it is using SSL (where you have the https:// rather than just http://). I signed up for Sharepoint hosting on the 1and1 service and they offer the ability to purchase and install an SSL certificate which makes it use https://. Secondly, I also installed the Webfolders fix for Vista which can be found here: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en It seems to work okay, but still new for me (still testing). In particular, I'm trying to figure out now how to open the Notebook that was created in the SharePoint Document Library while I am not connected (the offline copy).... Overall I think OneNote 2007 is a fantastic tool - what I always wanted (I was a user of ECCO, Agenda, MyBase, etc.). But the sharing/synch stuff REALLY needs some more thorough documentation. I imagine there are not many people using it via the Internet. Best of luck, -- Thanks, Brent Phillips "Kevin Ross" wrote: > I have a small group who wish to share a notebook using a hosted Sharepoint > Services group, such as epidirect.com or sharepointsite.com. I have created > free trial accounts on both hosting sites. > > I have accounts at both sites, and have yet to be able to create a shared > site. I am using Windows Vista, OneNote 2007 (part of Office 2007). I have > installed all available updates to the Office suite. I also have tried this > from an XP machine. > > Going through the steps, I select Share->Create Shared Notebook... This > opens the New Notebook Wizard. > > I enter the name of by notebook (FRC). I select the shared notebook - Group > project template. Click next. > > The 'Who will use this notebook' question is answered 'Multiple people will > share the notebook' and 'On a server (Sharepoint document library, etc). > Click next. > > The Confirm notebook location dialog box appears. In the path, I type my > sharepoint site name ( http://xxxxxx.wss.epidirect.com ). At this point, if I > click Browse as suggested by the dialog box, it will ask for my password, > then it hangs for a little while. It then opens up a select folder dialog of > my local machine. Not what I expected. > > If, instead of clicking browse, I just click Create, I get the message 'The > location for this notebook: http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ does not > exist. Do you want to create it?' I click yes. After a substantial delay, an > error message is generated: > > 'OneNote cannot create a new notebook at > http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ > > Possible reasons include: > - The specified location is not available > - You do not have permissions to modify the specified location > - The path or notebook name contains invalid characters > - The combined path and notebook name exceeds the maximum path length. > > Adjust the path and notebook name, and then try again.' > > I have tried this on XP and on Windows Vista. Both epidirect.com and > sharepointsite.com are running SharePoint 3.0. > > From reading through this help site, it appears that this rather major > feature of OneNote is just broken and does not work. Is that a fair summary? > Has anyone managed to share a notebook over the internet without having to > jump through a bunch of impossible hoops? > > Its a shame, since it is the sole reason I upgraded to Office 2007. > > Thanks > Kevin > |
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| RE: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services Kevin, I've been trying to do the same thing as you and received the same problem. Two things helped - first I finally figured out that Vista does not support making the connection to SharePoint via Webdav unless it is using SSL (where you have the https:// rather than just http://). I signed up for Sharepoint hosting on the 1and1 service and they offer the ability to purchase and install an SSL certificate which makes it use https://. Secondly, I also installed the Webfolders fix for Vista which can be found here: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en It seems to work okay, but still new for me (still testing). In particular, I'm trying to figure out now how to open the Notebook that was created in the SharePoint Document Library while I am not connected (the offline copy).... Overall I think OneNote 2007 is a fantastic tool - what I always wanted (I was a user of ECCO, Agenda, MyBase, etc.). But the sharing/synch stuff REALLY needs some more thorough documentation. I imagine there are not many people using it via the Internet. Best of luck, -- Thanks, Brent Phillips "Kevin Ross" wrote: > I have a small group who wish to share a notebook using a hosted Sharepoint > Services group, such as epidirect.com or sharepointsite.com. I have created > free trial accounts on both hosting sites. > > I have accounts at both sites, and have yet to be able to create a shared > site. I am using Windows Vista, OneNote 2007 (part of Office 2007). I have > installed all available updates to the Office suite. I also have tried this > from an XP machine. > > Going through the steps, I select Share->Create Shared Notebook... This > opens the New Notebook Wizard. > > I enter the name of by notebook (FRC). I select the shared notebook - Group > project template. Click next. > > The 'Who will use this notebook' question is answered 'Multiple people will > share the notebook' and 'On a server (Sharepoint document library, etc). > Click next. > > The Confirm notebook location dialog box appears. In the path, I type my > sharepoint site name ( http://xxxxxx.wss.epidirect.com ). At this point, if I > click Browse as suggested by the dialog box, it will ask for my password, > then it hangs for a little while. It then opens up a select folder dialog of > my local machine. Not what I expected. > > If, instead of clicking browse, I just click Create, I get the message 'The > location for this notebook: http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ does not > exist. Do you want to create it?' I click yes. After a substantial delay, an > error message is generated: > > 'OneNote cannot create a new notebook at > http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ > > Possible reasons include: > - The specified location is not available > - You do not have permissions to modify the specified location > - The path or notebook name contains invalid characters > - The combined path and notebook name exceeds the maximum path length. > > Adjust the path and notebook name, and then try again.' > > I have tried this on XP and on Windows Vista. Both epidirect.com and > sharepointsite.com are running SharePoint 3.0. > > From reading through this help site, it appears that this rather major > feature of OneNote is just broken and does not work. Is that a fair summary? > Has anyone managed to share a notebook over the internet without having to > jump through a bunch of impossible hoops? > > Its a shame, since it is the sole reason I upgraded to Office 2007. > > Thanks > Kevin > |
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| RE: Sharing a notebook using Sharepoint Services Kevin, I've been trying to do the same thing as you and received the same problem. Two things helped - first I finally figured out that Vista does not support making the connection to SharePoint via Webdav unless it is using SSL (where you have the https:// rather than just http://). I signed up for Sharepoint hosting on the 1and1 service and they offer the ability to purchase and install an SSL certificate which makes it use https://. Secondly, I also installed the Webfolders fix for Vista which can be found here: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en It seems to work okay, but still new for me (still testing). In particular, I'm trying to figure out now how to open the Notebook that was created in the SharePoint Document Library while I am not connected (the offline copy).... Overall I think OneNote 2007 is a fantastic tool - what I always wanted (I was a user of ECCO, Agenda, MyBase, etc.). But the sharing/synch stuff REALLY needs some more thorough documentation. I imagine there are not many people using it via the Internet. Best of luck, -- Thanks, Brent Phillips "Kevin Ross" wrote: > I have a small group who wish to share a notebook using a hosted Sharepoint > Services group, such as epidirect.com or sharepointsite.com. I have created > free trial accounts on both hosting sites. > > I have accounts at both sites, and have yet to be able to create a shared > site. I am using Windows Vista, OneNote 2007 (part of Office 2007). I have > installed all available updates to the Office suite. I also have tried this > from an XP machine. > > Going through the steps, I select Share->Create Shared Notebook... This > opens the New Notebook Wizard. > > I enter the name of by notebook (FRC). I select the shared notebook - Group > project template. Click next. > > The 'Who will use this notebook' question is answered 'Multiple people will > share the notebook' and 'On a server (Sharepoint document library, etc). > Click next. > > The Confirm notebook location dialog box appears. In the path, I type my > sharepoint site name ( http://xxxxxx.wss.epidirect.com ). At this point, if I > click Browse as suggested by the dialog box, it will ask for my password, > then it hangs for a little while. It then opens up a select folder dialog of > my local machine. Not what I expected. > > If, instead of clicking browse, I just click Create, I get the message 'The > location for this notebook: http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ does not > exist. Do you want to create it?' I click yes. After a substantial delay, an > error message is generated: > > 'OneNote cannot create a new notebook at > http://xxxxx.wss.epidirect.com/frc/ > > Possible reasons include: > - The specified location is not available > - You do not have permissions to modify the specified location > - The path or notebook name contains invalid characters > - The combined path and notebook name exceeds the maximum path length. > > Adjust the path and notebook name, and then try again.' > > I have tried this on XP and on Windows Vista. Both epidirect.com and > sharepointsite.com are running SharePoint 3.0. > > From reading through this help site, it appears that this rather major > feature of OneNote is just broken and does not work. Is that a fair summary? > Has anyone managed to share a notebook over the internet without having to > jump through a bunch of impossible hoops? > > Its a shame, since it is the sole reason I upgraded to Office 2007. > > Thanks > Kevin > |
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