Updated: 5/1/2003; 3:22:53 PM.
Blogging Alone
Stephen Dulaney's Radio Weblog
        

Monday, April 14, 2003

From dave's piece on OPML from year ago something to look into next.

"A short-step on that path is for other developers to explore generalized HTML-based directory browsers as we have at UserLand."


2:50:54 PM    comment []

This from the article series on the 10 year aniversry of the browser.

"This customer wants to socialize instead of communicate," Tammy Savage, group manager of Microsoft's NetGen division, said in a recent interview. "They want to do things together and get things done--and they really want to meet new people. They have a way of vouching for each other as friends, figuring out who to trust and not trust." [News.com]


2:13:13 PM    comment []

RDF still looking for a killer (set of) app(s)?.

Nice (OK, not all so nice) back-and-forth on the RDF (Resource Description Framework) standard over at Joi's, featuring Dave Winer and Danny Ayers among others. The acronym finder may come in handy. (Thanks Marc for pointing to the action.)

On a related note:

[Seb's Open Research]
12:55:22 PM    comment []

Knowledge management and weblogs. Knowledge management has been premised on the notion that the knowledge to be managed already exists and simply needs to be collected and organized to obtain the promised benefits.

One reason that so many of us find weblogs exciting in the realm of knowledge management is that weblogs reveal that the most important knowledge needs to be created before it can be collected and organized.

This is similar to the argument about the important split between tacit and explicit knowledge but much simpler. There is a category of knowledge that lies between explicit and tacit--what a colleague of mine, Jeanie Egmon, labels as "implicit." This is knowledge that is actually fairly simple to write down once you decide that it's worth doing so and once you have tools that make it easy to do so. It's the knowledge of context and the whys behind the whats. It's the knowledge that's obvious at the time and on site, but mysterious even to its creators six months and six hundred miles later.

In the knowledge economy that we all live in, even if we keep trying to stay comfortably ensconced in the industrial economy that used to make so much sense, we need to reflect on and learn from experience on a daily basis in order to maintain any sort of edge. That reflection and learning depends on having high quality raw material to work with. That's what weblogs provide.

[McGee's Musings]
12:54:14 PM    comment []

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