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Creating a Web Page from a Master Page 393<br />

5. In the Enter a name for this new Web Part Page box, type MyContent, and<br />

then click OK.<br />

The New Web Part Page dialog box closes, and a dialog box opens warning that<br />

the page does not contain any regions that are editable in safe mode.<br />

6. Click Yes to confirm opening the page in advanced edit mode.<br />

The MyContent.aspx page opens in workspace as a new tab.<br />

CLEAN UP Leave SharePoint Designer and the MyContents.aspx page open if you are<br />

continuing to the next exercise.<br />

Upgrading Your Master Pages<br />

If you have a Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 or a SharePoint Server 2007 installation<br />

and you created your own master pages, you have a couple of options to<br />

move those master pages to SharePoint 2010. You can use your master pages<br />

unchanged on a SharePoint 2010 installation, and they will have the same functionality<br />

as they had before. However, if you want to upgrade your master pages to<br />

incorporate SharePoint 2010 functionality, you can do the following:<br />

●●<br />

●●<br />

Create a SharePoint 2010 master page and amend it to incorporate any elements<br />

from the master page you created with the previous version of SharePoint.<br />

Modify your existing master page by adding SharePoint 2010 elements.<br />

Change is for the better, and there are some substantial changes from the default<br />

master pages provided with Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 and Office<br />

SharePoint Server. For example, the use of tables has diminished substantially, the<br />

HTML tag is now included, and navigation uses unordered lists.

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