This is a list of KM / eLearning blogs in order of originality, consistency and KM focus. It is a collection of the important KM watering holes. This page is part of KmWiki. Started by DenhamGrey on 06/30/1999.
5:53:55 PM comment []> 
I copied this segment of a post from Windley's Enterprise Computing Weblog, this is a weblog that I hadn't visited before but is worth a click through. I also agree with him on this particular topic.
Andy Hertzfeld (of Mac fame) and Mitch Kapor (of Lotus fame) are speaking about Chandler, an open source productivity tool that Kapor is funding out of his own pocket. The organization Mitch created to build it is the Open Source Applications Foundation. Why Chandler?
email is the most important productivity tool
there are gaps between what email is and what users want.
Mitch describes it as Lotus agenda meets the Internet. A rich ability to associate all kinds of thing and people in natural ways. Here are some features:
Power email - managing large volumes of email
Sharing and collaboration - share anything with anyone including browsing other people's repositories. Publish and subscribe to let you receive changes automatically.
I am watching the development of Chandler with interest. It is an open source program that may provide far greater email functionality developed by Mitch Kapor. This link is to a demo of the functionality associated with version 0.1.
Each made my Outlook mailbox behave weirdly. Ella, was better for screening spam, but I deleted it, finding Cloudmark a much better, more accurate tool. I was more hopeful about Kubi from Kubi Software for collaborative email. I couldn't make this tool work at all, even though I fiddled with it for several hours. C'est la vie.
8:04:00 AM comment []> 
Communities are one of the basic elements of experience sharing and collaboration. There are several new software tools that help to identify and reinfoce knowledge sharing communities:
Each of these tools should be watched, there are privacy concerns, but with careful use, these tools could allow analysis that would strengthen the quality and value of experience shared.