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February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2]: Features
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Without doubt, 2007 was an important transitional year for enterprise content management (ECM). We saw the emergence of the MOI vendors—Microsoft, Oracle and IBM—as serious players in the market, with the dual, and frequently contradictory, goals of bringing ECM to the masses and delivering sweeping content services as core infrastructure.
Posted 05 Feb 2008
/ February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2] Issue
- by
Alan Pelz-Sharpe
Law offices handle most of their documents electronically, but a substantial minority of their work arrives in paper form, and getting it to the intended recipient can create a bottleneck in the workflow.
Business process management (BPM) has been one of the most successful types of enterprise applications. Rather than becoming shelfware, it tends to proliferate throughout an organization once its capabilities are demonstrated.
Retailers are incorporating knowledge management into their processes to gain advantage over their competitors, enabling executives and lower level managers to quickly run reports on sales and other performance measures, to handle inventory better and to gain a clearer understanding of their products.
Posted 05 Feb 2008
/ February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2] Issue
- by
Phil Britt
Posted 05 Feb 2008
/ February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2] Issue
Posted 05 Feb 2008
/ February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2] Issue
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February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2]: Industry Watch
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Kazeon unleashes Version 3
Posted 04 Feb 2008
/ February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2] Issue
Speed litigation review processes
Posted 04 Feb 2008
/ February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2] Issue
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February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2]: News Analysis
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Google is taking an important step forward in Web-based content acquisition and distribution. In addition, the Google technology is well suited to some organizations' need for robust, hosted content management and distribution systems.
Information technology is the nervous system of every enterprise.
Posted 05 Feb 2008
/ February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2] Issue
- by
Peter Dorfman
Despite the fact that there are 56 million of us out there, people continue to struggle both with the definition of a knowledge worker as well as with self-identification.
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February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2]: Columns by David Weinberger
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Posted 05 Feb 2008
/ February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2] Issue
- by
David Weinberger
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February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2]: Columns From The Editor
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Posted 05 Feb 2008
/ February 2008 [Volume 17, Issue 2] Issue
- by
Hugh McKellar