Chuck Frey has released the results of his recent mind mapping software survey. This survey was about how mapping software is used and the functionality that people find most helpful at a high level.
Chuck Frey has released the results of his recent mind mapping software survey. This survey was about how mapping software is used and the functionality that people find most helpful at a high level.
APQC's knowledge management blogger, Jim Lee, doesn't think so. I think he's looking at things the wrong way.
Chicago Tribune business columnist, Barbara Rose, had a piece on the importance of "face time" yesterday.
OnePipe gives you a quick way to create a sub-feed from an existing feed based on your query.
Brett Miller has some interesting thoughts about memory and anti-memory. Maybe we need to learn how to forget.
Mohamed Taher turned up a research paper that delves into the "Role of Information Professionals in Knowledge Management Programs."
David Laffineuse provides a great quote on the mindset of resource managers in multi-project environments.
James Robertson usually has interesting things to say around knowledge management. This time he clearly states that There are no "KM Systems" in his latest CM Briefing Excellent.
Jim McGee is thinking about "enterprise 2.0" and the importance of thinking styles.
Jeffrey Phillips has some interesting thoughts on what he calls The Ad hocracy in organizations that appear to prefer doing things without well-defined processes.
The Chicago Tribune had an article on e-mail addiction that focused on Marsha Egan and her 12-Step program for overcoming e-mail addiction.
Mukund Mohan documents a case study that talks about what engages a community: interesting questions.
Computerworld interviews the authors of some new research on IT and productivity. Looks like some interesting though easily misinterpreted results.
Over lunch last week, Jim McGee mentioned the CIO Insight piece on Alan Kay in relation to personal effectiveness, and now he's blogged it.
Two funny things came across the aggregator today. The first is Mukund Mohan's tongue-in-cheek interview from the future, and the second is Valdis Krebs' find of a web gizmo that brings that future closer than I thought.
I read Bruce MacEwen fairly regularly for pieces like this one, "Do the Management Gurus Have Clothes?" I see a link to Theory of Constraints in his discussion.
Phil Wainewright has some thoughts around "Solving the 1:10:100% problem" of community participation: don't worry about it and focus on the people creating useful content.
Kyle McFarlin has published his Top 10 Mapping Shortcut Tips (MindManager & ResultsManager), and Jason Dorko followed-up with some more of his favorites. And here are a couple of mine.
Emily Chang jumped into an interesting discussion of one piece of personal knowledge management with My Data Stream.