June 2006, [Vol 15, Issue 6]
Features
Collaboration and portals team up for enterprise workplace
Mark LevittKathleen Quirk //
26 May 2006
What is a sure way to lose the attention of customers or prospects? Tell them that you want to sell them more IT infrastructure. That can be very challenging because of the amount and complexity of infrastructure that has already been purchased and deployed over many years.
Finding experts--explicit and implicit
Judith Lamont, Ph.D. //
26 May 2006
Several years ago, expertise location was a fast-growing branch of KM, helping to find the human repositories of specialized knowledge. Then it seemed to recede as an application of interest, perhaps because some of the solutions were narrowly focused, too hard to maintain or not well integrated with other enterprise applications. But the requirement to locate experts has not gone away.
E-government: enhancing national security
Judith Lamont, Ph.D. //
26 May 2006
Since 2002, the Naval Postgraduate School’s Center for Homeland Defense and Security has developed a wide range of graduate education programs that help current and future homeland security leaders with strategies, policies and organizational elements to defeat terrorism in the United States. The CHDS, which is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, offers a homeland security master’s degree that was the
Personal toolkit: Mapping the mind’s eye
Steve Barth //
26 May 2006
At a meeting one day, I found myself sitting between two eminent KM thinkers. Both men were rapidly taking notes directly into their laptops. One was using PersonalBrain from TheBrain Technologies. The other was using MindManager from Mindjet. My colleagues raved passionately about each of those tools, as do many people who use either one.
Scientists take a closer look at ELNs
David Raths //
26 May 2006
In the pharmaceutical industry, an electronic lab notebook can be more than a receptacle for documents; it can be a platform for knowledge management and collaboration.
BPM ASPs
26 May 2006
Business process management (BPM) is the most complex of content management technologies. Hosted BPM services reduce the complexity of integration and management, promote ease of use and cut costs.
News Analysis
Are your digital assets protected?
Andy Moore //
26 May 2006
ITI to launch new enterprise search portal
26 May 2006
Wikis--a disruptive innovation
Cindy Gordon //
26 May 2006
Innovation is ranked a top priority by global CEOs. Yet, few CEOs manage innovation by linking strategy to structure.
COLUMNS:
David Weinberger
The case for two semantic webs
David Weinberger //
26 May 2006
...Web pages almost always tell us what the destination of the link is about, and often what we ought to think about it.
So, when Tim Berners-Lee issued the call for the Semantic Web, it wasn’t because there weren’t enough meaningful phrases online.
The Future of the Future
The Future of the Future: The future workplace
Dan Holtshouse //
26 May 2006