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When Nations Voluntarily Build Their Own Coffins
Referrer List Improvements Wanted Teaching the Next Generation of KM Leaders Managing Local and Remote URLs in Radio Automating Radio Deployment Can Small Business Use Web Services Playing With Wireless PickWick Hotel Rating Rethinking the Intranet Staff Collaborative Work and Intranets Theme Design
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Tuesday, August 13, 2002When Nations Voluntarily Build Their Own CoffinsI read this Register article and it says, basically, we now have the Germans, the Danes, and the EU Database Directive all working cohesively to make Europe into the technological and economic backwater of the 21st century.I don't know what the chances are of this sort of thing getting to the States. So far the stupidity is limited to Europe, and it truly is just one more step on their path to economic irrelevancy in our lifetime. At this rate they won't have anything to sell but old castles and pretty vistas by the time I retire. Deep Linking - Another article on deep linking, another heavy sigh. Somebody call a timeout. And motion for Congress to send some eager beaver who likes to create new laws. Say, Berman, get over here. You want to introduce some Internet legislation? Okay, here's what you do. Introduce a bill that says the law doesn't recognize any cause of action based on someone linking to another person's site (after all that's what the Web was created to allow). But this law isn't there to protect people from their own stupidity, so if people want to use technical means to frustrate deep linking then they're allowed to do that. Now that would be a law that makes sense. So what are the odds of that getting passed? [Ernie the Attorney] Monday, August 12, 2002Referrer List Improvements WantedRadio Wishlist - RCS Referers: RSS feed and rolling 24 hours..Can I get my referer lists as RSS feeds from the "Radio Community Server"? Can we make the list a rolling 24 or 25 hours instead of a clean sweep at midnight? [aka Blue Sky Radio] [a klog apart]Sunday, August 11, 2002Teaching the Next Generation of KM LeadersThis article in Searcher Magazine discusses the changes taking place in Library and Information Science education and a study of current curricula at accredited institutions. It's written by a professor of Information Sciences at the University of Tennessee.
By 2017, some 68 percent of today's librarians will have retired, according to recent estimates in the news (Lynch). President and Mrs. Bush have launched an initiative through the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) to recruit "a generation of librarians." Since schools of library and information science traditionally attract second or third career professionals, the aging of the information professions is a cause for concern. In addition, many new information-related jobs outside libraries now attract LIS graduates and compete with libraries as employers. I've been looking for a grad student in LIS to help me think through some business information flow issues, so this caught my eye. I know most small businesses don't have the resources to hire an information professional but, from my experience, small businesses need information help more than anyone. And the article discusses how LIS programs are more frequently showing students all the possible career paths they can take.
The careers that attract students to LIS programs aren't always what they end up pursuing. In fact, many of them come into the program without realizing all the career possibilities. One current student told me he started with an interest in special libraries, but, "as I have progressed, I realized that the skills that librarians have of analyzing information sources, or organizing information, and in researching are vital not only in libraries but in government and private business." His new goals are "to use the skills I have acquired to begin a career in knowledge management or competitive intelligence," with the ultimate goal of being in a position that will "have an effect on strategic planning." Now that's the kind of person I'm looking for. Managing Local and Remote URLs in RadioI don't know anything about writing macros for Frontier so how would I create an ifLocal macro? For my reference mainly, as I don't fully understand the fix but I most definitely understand the problem -- it's bitten me a couple of times already.
Jon Udell is moving his weblog to new home using Radio and external FTP site. One of the gotchas he found: Automating Radio DeploymentI'd forgotten how many interesting items Steve Pilgrim picks up. I hadn't updated my subscriptions list since he had all his trouble moving Radio to his own ftp serer and domain. That's all better now, as is Steve's new home.Steve points to some scripts Jon Udell is writing to smooth the deployment of multiple Radio blogs over at InfoWorld. I can't even deploy Radio on my laptop, but I think it's due more to some intellectual deficiency than any serous technological problem. Maybe I'll get it right when I have more time. Udell's post is focused more on replicting all the little changes we do to personalize our instance of Radio -- a good thing since it's likely a good many of us personalize at least some of the prefs once we get used to it. EVEN PILOTS WITH 8000 HOURS RUN CHECKLISTS FOR PROCEDURES Can Small Business Use Web ServicesIf you have any experience with the printing and publishing industries you know that, outside of a small handful of billion-dollar companies, business automation is a pipe dream. The print industry is largely made up of companies $20 million and smaller -- with net profits as low as 1 percent -- and the idea of EDI-based supply chain operations, electronic invoicing, and real-time inventory management is just beginning to occur to most of them.Even when it does occur, the implementation is most often a straight routinization of their old manual process -- it is exceedingly rare for a printer or publisher to completely re-engineer a process to take advantge of the inherent a nature of EDI and B2B e-commerce. I don't know whether these initiatives will lead directly to services that the average small enterprise can use -- BEA and IBM tend to focus on gargantuan implemenations no small business can afford. But if they can get the groundwork right, and seed the tide of easily accessible services for things like invoicing, POs, order confirmations, etc., it could make a major difference in the way the print industry operates in the future.
WEB SERVICES FOR SMALL BUSINESS AUTOMATION Playing With WirelessI'm just fooling around with my new wireless toys and Radio Remote Access -- sitting in the TV room watching NASCAR at Watkins Glen while blogging. The D-Link AirPlus hub is really cool. I can't tell any difference in performace vs sitting on my local desktop.I should have done this months ago. PickWick Hotel RatingHave any of you out in the blogoshpere ever stayed at the Pickwick hotel in San Francisco? I see it's half the price of the Palomar, and just about as close to Moscone.Rethinking the Intranet StaffMartin White of Intranet Focus Blog provokes some thoughts on just who should staff and run an intranet for best results. The need to take an integrated view of a company's information systems seems to be gaining momentum.My limited experience has been, in fact, that IT quite often does strangle intranets and most any collaborative effort with a lock-down, security-centric approach that is rarely warranted. Certainly some things need strong protection, but the blanket application of strong security technologies and approaches have really limited the usabiltiy of intranets I've been a part of -- for both large and small companies. This, in turn, limited users' ability to easily contribute and update content, leading to some of the problems noted in the article. Intranets need team players. This is the title of an excellent article in New Media Zero by Steve Lodewyke of Think Lateral. This short article contains some important insights into the management of intranets. Collaborative Work and IntranetsThis post links to a nice survey and introduced me to an interesting intranet weblog I'll be adding to my subscriptions. As |Matt| notes, the survey is geared toward BigCo, and unless you're a senior financial manager or have P&L responsibility you won't have any idea how to answer. But the behavioral section is very interesting and applicable to almost any organization.The intranet is not a coporate brochure damnit!. |
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This Page was last updated: Wed, 02 Jul 2008 22:06:57 GMT
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