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KMWorld 2024 Is Nov. 18-21 in Washington, DC. Register now for Super Early Bird Savings!

Features

KMWorld 2023 Video - Chat AI and Metadata

Can metadata generate its own data?

KMWorld 2023 Video - How to Guard Against AI Bias

AI reflects the conscious and unconscious biases of the knowledge that's fed into it and the learning model at its core. So how do we arrive at a better understanding of our AI systems' biases-knowing that we may share them and have contributed to them-and take measures to curb and counteract them?

JOIN US AT KMWORLD NOVEMBER 6–9, 2023 JW MARRIOTT WASHINGTON, D.C.

It's an exciting time for KM, with new technologies and new approaches sparking new opportunities. The KMWorld conference, the largest global gathering of KM thought leaders, practitioners, and authors, returns to Washington, D.C., this November.

OBSERVATIONS ON KM: Past, Present, and Future

Pairing human knowledge with technologies that allow for data extraction, information analysis, and knowledge insights is the future of KM.

David Weinberger keynote address at KMWorld 2012: facilitating knowledge sharing

Knowledge as we've known it for 100 years has been knocked over by little hyperlinks, says David Weinberger, a senior researcher at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet & Society and co-director of the Harvard Library Innovation Lab. In his keynote address at KMWorld 2012, Weinberger explores the new boundaries of knowledge management.

TEXT ANALYTICS: Compelling products that pack a punch!

"The volume, complexity and importance of medical information used in support of diagnosis and treatment of illness, as well as the dramatically rising costs of healthcare, drive initiatives to improve information use" ...

The changing nature of knowledge

Longtime KMWorld columnist David Weinberger's latest book is Too Big To Know: Rethinking Knowledge Now That the Facts Aren't the Facts, Experts are Everywhere, and the Smartest Person in the Room Is the Room. His previous works include, The Cluetrain Manifesto, Small Pieces Loosely Joined and Everything is Miscellaneous. He is a senior researcher at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet & Society and co-director of the Harvard Library Innovation Lab...

The Whole Earth BPM Catalog

There are business processes, and then there are processes that mean business. Not all work activities are created equal.

Take me, for example. A work process for me is: Decide to write an article; worry about it; pace the floor, fret, stew and finally get it done at the last minute. Most of the time. Doesn't sound like much of a "process," does it? You'd think that after 30-odd years of doing this, it would get easier. Nope. But I try to keep in mind the advice my friend David Weinberger gave me once: "Crappiness is hard to detect, but lateness is apparent immediately" . . . .

Everything is Miscellaneous

Longtime KMWorld columnist David Weinberger, a fellow at Harvard's Berkman Center, recently discussed his new book with Hugh McKellar, KMWorld editor in chief.

Trend-Setting Products of 2007: Infinity Info Systems, Intellisearch, ISYS, KANA

Infinity Info Systems: Contact Management Solutions, IntelliSearch: IntelliSearc Platform 2.0, ISYS: ISYS 8 Enterprise Search Suite, KANA: Response for Email Management

Conversations and communities

The quest for content quality:Improving effectiveness is the next frontier for the CM industry

Content, not document, management

Data warehousing from end to end

Ten steps to achieve KM success

On track with KM at AIIM

Leaders empower knowledge companies

Tips for strategic IT planning

Community mulls emerging-market problems at two-day Camden summit

DM: as foundational as the slab under your house