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Tuesday, May 6, 2003

Knowledge workers and productivity tools

Jim McGee is on a roll with his most recent short essays on KM. Having recently attended Training 2003 here in Atlanta (I go every year) I am struck by just how much energy gets put into technology training -- what buttons to click, how to submit, how to follow instructions, etc. -- but how it is often left to the individual to figure out just how all that button-clicking, link-making, screen-grabbing stuff really helps them. As Jim points out, it's our responsibility to figure that out. But we need to be sure spread that knowledge as widely as possible once we have it, clueing in as many friends, co-workers, and colleagues as we can. Only in sharing the pathway can we reach the goal of collaborative productivity.
Knowledge workers and productivity tools

[...] The fundamental challenge, and opportunity, is that we've been content to focus on increasing the power and flexibility of our technology tools while assuming that knowledge workers will figure out how to take advantage of that power. As knowledge workers it's our responsibility to do more of that figuring out. We need to stop counting on the marketing promises of technology vendors and start learning how to use the tools we've already got. [via McGee's Musings

By the way, this is my first post from NewzCrawler using the RPC metaweblog api built into Radio. Pretty cool.
Posted by: Send an e-mail to Terry Frazier Terry Frazier at 11:48 PM  | Permanent Link  | Trackback URL | 

Props to Weblogger.com

A quick note of thanks to Erin Clerico over at Weblogger for prompt, personal service when I made a dumb mistake and shut down my weblog site.

Whilst mucking about with some Radio stuff I managed to errantly delete my index.html page. I'm not sure how that happened, but earlier in the day I had a weird Radio glitch and went diving into Radio.root to do some ill-advised house cleaning. For the most part it worked out ok but I'm guessing somewhere in all the confusion I lost count and fired only five shots, instead of six. My home page never got re-rendered and upstreamed properly, causing my site to give an access error.

When I first noticed it I figured it was a few minutes of server maintenance or something and ignored it. Several hours later it was still down and I began to try and figure out what was wrong. I failed.

I sent an e-mail to Erin about 10:15 EDT. In about 45 minutes my phone rang. Erin was calling to point out that my weblog directory didn't have an index page.

Doh!

In short order I restarted Radio and republished the Home page. All is well. Thanks to Erin. If you need good Manila hosting, reasonable prices and good support check out the folks at Weblogger.com. They're good people. And from what I hear they have some very exciting things on the horizon...

Posted by: Send an e-mail to Terry Frazier Terry Frazier at 11:28 PM  | Permanent Link  | Trackback URL | 

Idea Management

New RSS feed from Corante led me to their IdeaFlow blog. Several interesting pieces on the site that warrant follow-up reading. The first to catch my eye was this piece on idea management.

Making idea creation and management explicit is something well worth doing. There's a whole range of thought on facilitating structured innovation. (One example is Robert G. Cooper's Stage Gate methodology, profiled in Product Development for the Service Sector.) A good KM system should intuitively reinforce both effective ideation (idea creation) and efficient development of good ideas. But designing in such capabilities isn't as simple as collecting documents or messages.

This Idea Management resource listing is a good place to start the thinking process for building such a system.

Creativity + Knowledge Management = Idea Management

OK. Let's assume you're creative and innovative, and so are your employees. So what do you do with all of this creativity, all these ideas? You manage them, perhaps with the help of the concepts and software emerging from the growing subset of innovation management known as idea management. Idea management can also be thought of as the crossroads where innovation intersects with knowledge management. As usual, Chuck Frey at InnovationTools.com is already on this: he's launched an Idea Management Resource Center that's worth checking out. [Corante: IdeaFlow]

Posted by: Send an e-mail to Terry Frazier Terry Frazier at 10:46 AM  | Permanent Link  | Trackback URL | 


Monday, May 5, 2003

Canadians Have Too Much Liberty to Suit U.S.

Damn Canadians! Where do they get off placing personal liberty ahead of surveillance and police issues? Don't they know we're at war?
U.S. says Canada cares too much about liberties
"The [U.S.] State Department report on global terrorism for 2002 suggests that while Canada has been helpful in the fight against terrorism, it doesn't spend enough on policing and places too much emphasis on civil liberties." (5/1/03) [Canada.com]
Posted by: Send an e-mail to Terry Frazier Terry Frazier at 11:02 PM  | Permanent Link  | Trackback URL | 

NewzCrawler

Rick provides a short review of NewzCrawler in the context of his daily usage. Very helpful. Take a look at the feature/function list he provides. I may be looking for a new aggregator myself pretty soon, so this sort of overview is always helpful.

NewzCrawler as Aggregator. In making the switch from Radio to Movable Type, I needed to find a replacement for my News Aggregator. I tried several - including Amphetadesk and NewsGator - before deciding on NewzCrawler. Some of the key features that make NewzCrawler... [tins ::: Rick Klau's weblog]
Posted by: Send an e-mail to Terry Frazier Terry Frazier at 1:22 PM  | Permanent Link  | Trackback URL | 

Getting Conversant with Easy News Topics

There was some great discussion last night in one of the Conversant beta-test groups regarding Easy News Topics and the inclusion of metadata into RSS datastreams. I'm looking to have an ENT-compliant capability in my Conversant-based intranet/extranet.

It looks like a pretty straightforward (though not necessarily simple) project to include basic ENT-style metadata into a Conversant system. The folks on the beta list grokked the ENT concept right away after looking over the spec and saw some interesting possibilities for their own KM/KS activities. I'm looking forward to seeing where this goes.

ENT10.gif  conversant_badge.gif

Posted by: Send an e-mail to Terry Frazier Terry Frazier at 1:04 PM  | Permanent Link  | Trackback URL | 

Scientific, Medical, and Engineering Texts Online

I had high hopes when I saw Jim McGee's pointer to this collection of quality scientific reference material. Having recently read The Next Fifty Years, edited by John Brockman, I've grown more interested in reading the works of scientists who "are writing for, and engaging, their peers in other disciplines" and "attempt to make the latest scientific research understandable within science itself as well as to a wide audience." The Next Fifty Years has 25 great essays along those lines, if you like this sort of thing.

A quick browse through the National Academies Press categories page indicates a number of interesting possibilities, but trying to view any of the titles online quickly squelches any enthusiasm. The books are all presented online as scanned TIFF images -- images that were quite blurry on my 19", 1152x864 monitor screen. I tried a couple of different resolutions to make it better but it didn't help. Looking at any of these for very long will give you a headache.

The books are also presented one page at a time -- similar to what you see in an online book store where the intent is to give you a chance to check a few pages before buying. There are printable PDF files available for every page -- but they are individual, single-page files.

I really thought the NAP listing would be similar to the Open e-Journals in Education project, but I was disappointed. The NAP does some nice things, like provide pointers to similar books, but their intent is clearly to sell the hard copy versions of these papers and to make it as inconvenient as possible for online readers.

After having already paid for this stuff with my tax dollars, I'd like a little more consideration as an online reader.

Online texts from National Academies Press.

Free Science, Engineering and Medical Books Online. I am not lying. The National Academies Press which was created by the National Academies to publish the reports issued by the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, the Institute of Medicine, and the National Research Council, all operating under a charter granted by the Congress of the United States, has more than 2,500 free, searchable, high quality books online. Some random examples: The Genomic Revolution: Unveiling the Unity of Life Strange Matters: Undiscovered Ideas at the Frontiers of Space and Time Who Goes There?: Authentication Through the Lens of Privacy Microbial Threats to Health: Emergence, Detection, and Response [kuro5hin.org]

A useful resource to have handy

[McGee's Musings]
Posted by: Send an e-mail to Terry Frazier Terry Frazier at 11:20 AM  | Permanent Link  | Trackback URL | 


Sunday, May 4, 2003

Scare Tactics

Very interesting. RIAA spreads rumors of it's "malicious" programs for ruining the computers of college students. I dunno. Would they do this? Could they?

They might give it a shot -- legal or no. They're practically insane over their loss of control. And they really only pay attention to the law when it works in their favor anyway. But it sure could get ugly if they start stuff like this. There's no evidence they're smart enough to pull it off, and you shouldn't get into a battle of wits when you have no ammunmition.

Mean Tech For Thwarting Music Piracy. CBS News May 3 2003 5:37PM ET

Some of the world's biggest record companies, facing rampant online piracy, are quietly financing the development and testing of software that would sabotage the computers and Internet connections of people who download pirated music, according to industry executives cited by The New York Times in a story on its Web site prepared for its Sunday editions.

[...] A program the Times describes as "more malicious," dubbed "freeze," locks up a computer system for a certain duration — minutes or possibly even hours — risking the loss of data that was unsaved if the computer is restarted. It also displays a warning about downloading pirated music. Another program under development, called "silence," scans a computer's hard drive for pirated music files and attempts to delete them. One of the executives briefed on the silence program said to the Times that it did not work properly and was being reworked because it was deleting legitimate music files, too. [...] [Moreover - IP and patents news]

Posted by: Send an e-mail to Terry Frazier Terry Frazier at 2:01 AM  | Permanent Link  | Trackback URL | 
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