Knowledge Management – Where Are the Bees?

Tags: IBM, Collaboration, Collaboration 2.0, Web 2.0, Learning, Social Computing, Social Networking, Social Software, Social Media, Knowledge Management, KM, Knowledge Sharing, Personal Knowledge Management, PKM, Simplicity, New York, Somers, Madrid, JFK, Las Palmas, Travelling, Beekeeping, Beekeeper, Bees, Anastasio Marcos, Extremadura, Apihurdes, Euromiel, Cooperative, Consortium As I have just mentioned in a previous weblog post, this … Continue reading Knowledge Management – Where Are the Bees?

[e2.0] Enterprise Live Debate: Andrew McAfee and Tom Davenport at Enterprise 2.0 – Surviving the Knowledge Economy – Part III

Tags: Enterprise 2.0, Enterprise 2.0 Conference, e2.0, Collaboration Technologies, Social Computing, Social Networking, Social Software, Social Media, Web 2.0, Knowledge Management, KM, Knowledge Sharing, Personal Knowledge Management, PKM, Collaboration, Remote Collaboration, Social Networks, Communities, Learning, Tom Davenport, Andrew McAfee, Innovation, Org. Change, Business Transformation, Knowledge Economy, Knowledge Enterprise, Knowledge Corporation From there onwards, and quite … Continue reading [e2.0] Enterprise Live Debate: Andrew McAfee and Tom Davenport at Enterprise 2.0 – Surviving the Knowledge Economy – Part III

Ziki – Your Own Personal e-Card on the Web

Tags: Facebook, Twitter, Ziki, Flickr, Blogs, BlinkList, Social Computing, Social Networking, Social Software, Social Media, Web 2.0, Tagging, Tags, Tagclouds, Syndication, Groups, Communities, OPML, LinkedIn, XING, MyBlogLog, Frappr, Ex.plode.us, Knowledge Management, Knowledge Sharing, Collaboration, Remote Collaboration, Personal Knowledge Management, PKM, e-Card While most of the folks I get to read in my feeds on a … Continue reading Ziki – Your Own Personal e-Card on the Web

APQC KM & Innovation 2007 – The Role of Knowledge Management in Innovation by Carla O’Dell – Part Deux

Tags: APQC, APQC2007, Knowledge Management, KM, Knowledge Sharing, KM Events, Innovation, KM Training, KM Learning, Communities, Communities of Practice, CoPs, Social Computing, Social Software, Social Networking, KM 2.0, Houston, Carla O’Dell, Relationships, Social Networks, Trust, Social Capital, Web 2.0, Enterprise 2.0, Lessons Learned, Informal Communities After the few days break sharing my thoughts over here, … Continue reading APQC KM & Innovation 2007 – The Role of Knowledge Management in Innovation by Carla O’Dell – Part Deux

Discover What You Know – Will Knowledge Management Ever Change That Much? Does It Really Need To?

Tags: Knowledge Management, KM, Personal Knowledge Management, PKM, Collaboration, Remote Collaboration, Communities, IBM, IBM Lotus, Lotus, Nimmy, Thinking Inside The Blog, Jack Vinson, YouTube, Videos, Alan Lepofsky, Ken Porter, Intellectual Capital, KM Strategy, Explicit Knowledge, Tacit Knowledge, Social Computing, Social Networking, Social Software, KM 2.0, Web 2.0, Enterprise 2.0 One of the latest Knowledge Management … Continue reading Discover What You Know – Will Knowledge Management Ever Change That Much? Does It Really Need To?

A Weekly Glimpse of elsua – The Knowledge Management Blog – Week 42

Just like I have mentioned last week for the first time, here I am once again sharing a brief weblog post highlighting some of the most popular posts I have created over at my other Internet weblog elsua – The Knowledge Management Blog last week. Pretty much like last time, you would be able to … Continue reading A Weekly Glimpse of elsua – The Knowledge Management Blog – Week 42

Lost! Where Did Our Knowledge Go? – And How Social Software Can Help Bring It Back!

Here is another worth while reading article from CollaborationLoop, this time by David Goldes, that I am sure plenty of folks over here would be really interested in, specially if you are one of them. Yes, a baby boomer. The article itself is titled Lost! Where Did Our Knowledge Go? and it basically comes to … Continue reading Lost! Where Did Our Knowledge Go? – And How Social Software Can Help Bring It Back!

Modern Social Software Could Be the Key to Building Effective Enterprise Knowledge Systems – Reinventing the Intranet

It looks like quite a few of the regular weblogs that I follow have been talking about this very same subject. And all of them starting after the superb article that Job Udell creating on Modern Social Software Could Be the Key to Building Effective Enterprise Knowledge Systems: Reinventing the Intranet. So I just thought … Continue reading Modern Social Software Could Be the Key to Building Effective Enterprise Knowledge Systems – Reinventing the Intranet