Archive for the 'km2006' Category

Knowledge management is dead. Long live Knowledge Management

Monday, November 20th, 2006

In his post, The relevance of knowledge management today, says about Knowledge Management:
The terminology and tools have substantially moved on, yet the fundamental problems are not new. As such, the wheel does not need to be reinvented, and those who have been in the knowledge management space can apply their expertise with enormous relevance.
Ross Dawson […]

Web 2.0 is about participation, more than personalisation

Thursday, November 9th, 2006

I was in a conversation at Toronto’s Enterprise 2.0 Camp on Tuesday night with a guy in telecoms (sorry if someone knows his name please let me know) who said for him that Web 2.0 is personalisation. He sketched the following:
When I click a button on my phone to fetch a cab it would know […]

Blogs are like plastics, wikis are like leaves

Monday, November 6th, 2006

Clearing out the summer clothes from my wardrobe to make way for the warmth needed to protect against Canada’s heavy winters, I was moodling over some points made on Wikis last week at KMWorld.
In my workshop I’d alikened blogs as being like an accumulation of post-it notes ( “every opinion is out there but what […]

My talk at KMWorld

Wednesday, October 25th, 2006

Next Monday, the 30th October, Dr. Bill Ives and I will be giving a talk on Blogs and Wikis at the preconference of KMWorld. Bill will cover blogs, and I will cover wikis.
Bill will discuss corporation’s uses and policies of blogs. My talk covers a story of wikis and what they mean for creating idea […]