May/June 2026 [Volume 35, Issue 3]
Features
AI’s Impact on Data Silos and Knowledge Hubs
Jelani Harper //
11 May 2026
The impact of AI on both data silos and knowledge hubs is proving to be powerful in solving some age-old problems, including curtailing the effects of siloed information while increasing the value of knowledge hubs. It can only become more impactful going forward.
KM and IT Find Collaboration Productive
Judith Lamont, Ph.D. //
11 May 2026
IT plays a role in providing a port of entry for customer service solutions and for integrating them with the various repositories that form the knowledgebase. After that point, most KM solutions can be configured and managed by subject matter experts. But the infrastructure on which they are built, whether SaaS or on-prem, must provide the capacity and speed required to deliver their potential.
ViewPoints
Europe Needs to Stop Building Regulatory Moats and Start Building Markets
Daniele Viappiani //
11 May 2026
For Europe to cultivate world-leading AI companies, it needs to build the foundational conditions that have made ecosystems such as Silicon Valley so productive. This also means attracting and retaining talent through easier immigration, greater mobility across borders, and simpler equity compensation structures that make joining an early-stage startup genuinely rewarding. Without people willing and able to take risks on new ventures, there is no growth or innovation.
You Don’t Need 47 Agents
Avi Cavale //
11 May 2026
The most powerful multistep execution isn't a chain of specialized agents. It's a single model with enough context to plan, execute, and recover—informed by everything it's learned from every prior execution.
COLUMNS:
David Weinberger
A Glorious Victory for KM!
David Weinberger //
11 May 2026
That AI has proven itself to be a revolutionary knowledge tool paints a different picture of the world itself. For millennia, we in the West counted as the highest knowledge the bedrock beliefs that ground the certainty of the layers of lesser knowledge that rest upon them. While the success of our culture proves the value of this approach in some critical areas, the rapid advances in knowledge enabled by machine learning based in multidimensional models that are too complex for us to understand remind us of what we've always already known:Our world overwhelms our smidgeon of consciousness. And there's no shame in acknowledging that. In fact, it is genuinely liberating to embrace the fact that the world consists of particulars in infinite relationships, and that we pay a price when we sand down the distinctive differences among them.
The Future of the Future
Bringing Knowledge Out of the Shadows
Art Murray, D.Sc. //
11 May 2026
We can only wonder how many breakthrough ideas remain undiscovered simply because the right pieces did not fall into place. What better way to make those connections happen by design, rather than by chance, than for KM to provide the missing interstitial scaffolding?
Ethical Innovation
Why Knowledge Management Needs a Quantum Reboot for the Agentic AI Age
Alan Pelz-Sharpe //
11 May 2026
By embracing a quantum approach, we can create an organization that is genuinely adaptive and intelligent. Agents, freed from the shackles of classical KM, can roam our knowledge graphs, identifying emergent patterns and unexpected connections that no human ever could. They can see that the support ticket trend and the new feature request in the sales call are actually the same particle, just observed in different contexts.