| Guests: Welcome! · Sign Up · Log On | ||
b.cognoscoWhere leaping to conclusions is my primary form of forward motion. |
||
| Home · Identity · About b.cognosco · Archive Index · Book Store | ||
Most Popular
Book ReviewsRecently
Digital Dashboard Prototype
Another Hard Drive Failure Glory Be! Jenny The Power Librarian Returns Harvard Frontline Strategy Conference Web Builder Conference and Web Builder Tools Learning to Make Better Decisions Defining KM printChannel To Cease Operations Interview with Tom Genova of Rampage Systems Theme Design
IT Support
Hosting
|
Wednesday, September 18, 2002Digital Dashboard PrototypeDigital Dashboard prototype is a nice starting point for those looking to empower operational management systems with KM services.
Rajesh has a mock-up of a digital dashboard available. You can see where this is going. A portal of one. All data on the desktop. Simple, easy to customize, and powerful. [ Another Hard Drive FailureDamn it! Yet another hard drive went south on me last night. Thank the Almighty I took the time to setup these mirrored drives.I don't get it. I bought two identical IBM 30GB drives just over a year ago. They've both gone belly up within two weeks of each other. They sit in a Micron tower PC under the desk in my home office. It's about four inches off the floor, connected to a well-conditioned power line, with plenty of open air around it. I have one of those little temp alarms from PC Power & Cooling that's supposed to let me know if it gets too hot. The darn thing has never beeped once. This is not funny. I don't have time for this. Worse, I don't know where to look for the source of the problem. Tuesday, September 17, 2002Glory Be! Jenny The Power Librarian ReturnsI've read the tales of woe, cried the tears of the downtrodden, felt the fears of the huddled masses. But it's over now. The blogoshpere's prodigal InfoMaven has returned. Welcome back, Jenny.
A Very Shifted Library. Thanks to Lori Bell, I've been scanning the Memorial Hall Library's web site (they're located in Andover, Massachusetts). They do a great job of providing remote access to their databases, live online chat with a librarian, a browsable catalog (instead of just a searchable one), and they're even circulating Gemster ebooks . Lori led me there, though, because the MHL is yet another library circulating Audible MP3 audiobooks . What I found interesting, though, was that... [ Harvard Frontline Strategy ConferenceAnother interesting conference to add to the futures list. Let's see what JR has to say after it's done.
I am going to be blogging the Harvard Frontline Strategy Conference at the Ritz-Carlton in Boston on the 17th. Bennis, Davenport, and Siebel will be speaking. Should be fun and there are seats still available. If you are interested in attending, let me know. [ Web Builder Conference and Web Builder ToolsPersonal note: catalog Scoble's Web Builder Conference for future reference. I'm looking to change the focus of shows I attend -- go more toward genuine conference/seminars (sort of like my very first Seybold Seminars in Boston around 1989 or so) vs trade show/expos where the conference is often an afterthought. The Web Builder Conference sounds like it fits.Personal note Numero Dos: I didn't realize Scoble was with Thunder Lizard (or may be is Thunder Lizard.) I used to know some guys there years ago when they first started out doing QuarkXpress seminars -- at least I think it's the same company. The world keeps getting smaller. Scoble's endorsement may convince me to buy TopStyle. I've used HomeSite for several years and it ships with TopStyle Lite. I got to messing with CSS a couple of weeks ago with some new templates, realized how woefully inadequate my CSS knowledge was, and nearly bought TSPro on the Spot. (No, I can't bring myself to use Dreamweaver or any other snazzy editor that costs $350-$400 to do the simple, basic, occasional HTML pages I do.) I'm really teetering now. One positive comment from the peanut gallery will put me over the edge.
Getting back into Weblogging. Thanks to Chris Pirillo for snapping me out of my blog-free rut that I've been in. Learning to Make Better DecisionsJames Vornov is a director of clinical research for a pharmaco, and part-time faculty member in the Neuroscience department at Johns Hopkins. He's launched a project weblog, On Deciding...Better, dedicated to his learning about Decision Theory and the practice of Deciding. Here is just one excerpt from some of his introductory pages:I intend this website to be a tool to help myself and others learn how to make better decisions. There's a philosophy behind the site that I began to document in The Project, but its an unfinished work. James showed up in my referrer logs, but let's not confuse this with one of those "you link to me, I link to you" return-the-favor things. Far from it. Where am I ever going to cross paths with a Baltimore-based clinical research director, or hobnob with faculty at Johns Hopkins? I'm not. Not through any normal channels. This is one more example of the weblog phenomenon blasting away the barriers to discourse and knowledge sharing. Already in my brief blogging career I have shared conversations with men and women of exceptional intellect and accomplishment, people whose understanding and knowledge far outstrip my own. If I can give back but a tenth of what I gain, this weblog will be a success. Monday, September 16, 2002Defining KMA series of quotable, and thought-provoking, definitions of KM, ranging from the ethereal to the technical. My own definition? KM is the ordered placement of what you know, so that others may take best advantage of it.
Definitions of knowledge management. printChannel To Cease OperationsAnother small but innovative print e-procurement provider has announced a shutdown -- victim of pressures in the financial crucible formed between the shrinking economy and venture capital expectations.printChannel, a San Francisco-based provider of web technologies for on-line print procurement and order management, was funded by WarburgPincus. printChannel CEO Oliver Pflug last week announced plans to cease operations by November 15. This closure highlights the difficulties of selling technology and infrastructure services to an industry dominated by small- to mid-size businesses. Technology is often too transient and intangible to be a comfortable purchase for such companies -- those that can build their own will do so. Those that cannot will often just do without.
While there are still a few players offering pure technology services to the print industry, the trend is to have such services come from one of two fronts: In the end web technologies will become transparent, an expected norm for doing business. The shift from specialized providers to expected service is a normal, but still painful, stage in the maturation of this technology. Interview with Tom Genova of Rampage SystemsKeith Hevenor of Electronic Publishing interviews Tom Genova of Rampage in this article. Tom touches on the incorporation of PDF into the Rampage workflow, and covers the company's philosophy. The article gives a bit of insight into Rampage's plans for accomodating JDF and for becoming more compatible with some of the larger print production systems (i.e. HeiPort and Creo InSite.) |
SyndicationContactPresence |
|
This Page was last updated: Wed, 02 Jul 2008 22:06:57 GMT
License: Unless otherwise expressly stated all original material, of whatever nature, created by Terry W. Frazier and included in this website, its related pages and archives, is licensed under a Creative Commons License, some rights reserved.
Disclaimer: This is a personal website. The views expressed here are those of the author and no one else. This is also an experiment in thinking out loud, so there are no warranties as to the reliability or accuracy of anything presented here. Source material -- references, citations, quotes, photos, and other elements -- are gathered from publicly available materials and some of it may be restricted. Any trademarks used are the property of their respective creators or owners. All are reproduced under the principle of Fair Use.
|