Sunday, March 16, 2003
Infoliteracy Resource Page. Search Skills. Internet Search Skills: Tutorials and Courses Quote: "Using the Internet is easy, isn't it? All you have to do is... [elearnspace blog]

Bookmark this site
9:18:51 PM  #  comment []

Knowledge served with Passion and Craft Weblogs and passion.

I had an opportunity to listen to Mena and Ben Trott talk about Moveable Type last night courtesy of AKMA at Seabury Western. They sparked a good discussion around the role of weblogs in creating and sustaining community (two good live blogged accounts from AKMA and Gabe Bridger by way of Mike Marusin).

At least some of the power and energy behind the weblog phenomenon has to come from passion of the creators of weblog tools. All of the products supporting weblogs are labors of love; all grew out of individual efforts to scratch personal itches--Blogger, Moveable Type, Radio.

This is why weblogs will become important to knowledge management and knowledge sharing in organizations and why the big software players haven't been a significant factor yet.

Organizations have recognized that knowledge is an essential part of the value that they create. Knowledge management efforts on the other hand have largely been a disappointment because they have tried to force knowledge into a product metaphor; trying to force what is fundamentally a product of craft into an industrial model of reusable parts (see knowledge work as craft work).

Discussions about knowledge management in organizations always raise the issue of sharing with the argument that people will be reluctant to share out of fear that their efforts will be appropriated by others. This is rooted in a industrial product metaphor of knowledge. See knowledge work as craft, however, and the sharing issue dissolves. Craft workers exist to share the fruits of their creating. A true knowledge craft product embodies something of the soul and personality of its creator. You share it with others not so they can copy it but so that they can find inspiration in using it in their own craft.

Weblogs hold so much promise in the organizational realm precisely because they amplify this connection between craft and creator. Your record is there to be seen and to be shared.

This is also why weblogs are so confusing in the organizational realm. You have to move beyond the notion of reusable and reproducible product as the putative goal.

I had a conversation with Alan Kay a while back about Smalltalk and object-oriented programming that I now finally think I understand (conversations with Alan can be that way for those of us who are mere mortals). He was disappointed that the early commercialization efforts around Smalltalk and OO emphasized the idea of reuse. His goal had always been (and still is, take a look at Squeak and SqueakLand) to make it possible for developers to express what they were trying to do faster and more effectively. He was trying to make computers a medium for expressing certain kinds of thinking.

Weblogs accomplish something similar for knowledge workers. They lower the barriers to sharing ideas far enough that it becomes possible for nearly all of us to do so. Bring that inside organizations and you have a powerful tool for being effective as opposed to merely productive. Scary to the established order? Sure. But if value does truly depend on how well and how fast organizations can create and share new knowledge, then the winners will emerge from those who commit to making it work.

[McGee's Musings]


I have three points. The first is that bloggers are passionate about blogging. Second, this event was held in a major graduate school for training pastoral workers. Just like educators, a group that needs to get connected are the pastoral workers. Caregivers need support, too! I wonder if web based tools like blogs, may help pastoral workers. I think so. Sometimes a mission, be it in an urban area or rural, can be very isolating for any number of reaons. One needs to share about one's experiences and dialogue about the 'practice', especially if the folks one is working with would rather gab than get down to "business" .

Three, I love McGee's critique of business looking at knowledge making as a a reusable tool instead of as a craft. Knowledge as craft.. that is inspirational.

Amen!
9:01:11 AM  #  comment []

Tools are cool but... it the person behind the tools that counts. KM and technical trends. Technical trends bode well for KM Quote: "The challenge was and is to make more of the routine communication flowing... [elearnspace blog]


I think George again hits the nail on the head, on his commentary on the KM article in Infoworld. Blogging is organic.... or is the best blogging is organic... hmmmm. I do believe that a person needs a good personal motive to blog.
3:10:24 AM  #  comment []
Blogroolo RSS Tool for MT Ping blogrolling.com directly. Jason DeFillippo is beta testing a ping service for blogrolling.com at this address:

The address to add to the Remote Interfaces text box is

http://rpc.blogrolling.com/pinger/

The beta is just for MT users at this time, but Jason invites anyone to try it:

If you are running any other blog tool that lets you specify sites to ping feel free to add it in and try it. It's exactly the same format as weblogs.com as far as the XML and XML-RPC calls. Drop me an email to support[at]blogrolling.com if you have any feedback.

The point is to reduce the lag in updating the "recently updated" formatting in blogrolling listings:

You should notice your site updating instantly in the blogrolls. Since I don't have to wait for Weblogs.com's changes.xml file to update and process it's much faster. That happens on a 5 minute timer anyway.
[Radio Free Blogistan]
Another RSS tool to try for MT users who blogroll. What is interesting is some popular weblogs are moving from Radio to MT or MT to Blosxam flavors.
3:00:46 AM  #  comment []