Michael Pokocky's manifesto proposal at ChangeThis: Building The New Knowledge Web Manifesto.
Michael Pokocky's manifesto proposal at ChangeThis: Building The New Knowledge Web Manifesto.
Kevin Desouza of The Engaged Enterprise will present on "Plug-n-Play Knowledge Management" at the July 12th meeting of KM Chicago.
Michael McLaughlin writes "The Worst Thing About Best Practices." In isolation, I absolutely agree with McLaughlin. However, if they are part of an intelligent process, such as he suggests at the end of the article, best practices can be quite helpful.
It's a good thing I found this today. My aggregator has completely blown up. "Anyone who has kids will appreciate this (video), and anyone who doesn't have them should see it."
Chuck Martin has a set of 7 Tips for Getting of Control of E-mail at this week's Darwin Online, many of which I've advocated before.
I really need to come up with more non-home-office destinations, so I can cycle to them. Even worse, I'll be traveling during the Tour de France, and I am worried that I won't have Outdoor Life Network at the hotel.
That's my name listed as the chair for the session Barry describes here: Knowledge Management in Pharmaceutical Manufacturing - optimising efficencies in knowledge transfer.
In Gerry McGovern's current New Thinking newsletter/blog, he has an interesting argument that there is "No such thing as knowledge worker." Some of his thinking coincides with personal knowledge management as well.
Bruce MacEwen has some interesting thoughts about corporate expertise locators and an idea that companies might actually know more than they think about their experts.
Typical CCPM Project Management Implementation. I'm mostly linking this because it is a nice example of retrospectively walking through a CCPM implementation, complete with fever charts.
"Designing sticky knowledge networks" by Bush and Tiwana looks at the importance of reputation, relationship capital and personalization on the continued use of corporate knowledge networks.
I attended WIRED Magazine's NextFest 2005 yesterday at Chicago's Navy Pier. It was an interesting event with many displays of the (near) future of technology.
In my challenge to read anything this year, my Father's Day gift of Freakonomics by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner was so good I could barely put it down. For someone who enjoys numbers and math, I couldn't help wanting more: data, questions answered, and toys to do the analyses myself.
Lilia Efimova points to a paper about the "Dynamics of Email Triage" and discusses some interesting ideas about personal effectiveness in relation to how people learn to use their tools.
Chris Lundquist writes "Quick Collaboration and New News" that discusses Jybe for free online screen sharing (but not editing). Combine that with Skype and you have web meetings for the cost of your internet connection.
Fortune has an interview with Bill Gates and Ray Ozzie: "How to Escape E-Mail Hell" with some interesting tidbits.
Rojo is the first aggregator I've seen that incorporates the concept of tagging into the feed reading experience. This might be enough to get me to jump away from my current aggregator.