January 2009, [Vol 18, Issue 1]
                
                
        
            Features
    
        
            KM past and future: Solutions for a changing world 
        
        
            
                Judith Lamont, Ph.D. //
                    02 Jan 2009
        
        
            Despite today's economic difficulties, there is reason to be cautiously optimistic about the KM industry. Many functions it supports will continue to be needed, perhaps more than ever... 
    
        
            SaaS: flexible, efficient & affordable 
        
        
            
                Judith Lamont, Ph.D. //
                    02 Jan 2009
        
        
            Software as a service (SaaS) continues to make inroads into enterprise knowledge management, its progress fueled by the low cost of entry and minimal impact on internal IT resources. In addition, applications can be up and running in a very short time. That combination is helping to support a substantial growth rate for a number of SaaS vendors despite the overall economic climate...
    
        
            A component approach to content 
        
        
            
                Alan Pelz-SharpeAnn Rockley //
                    02 Jan 2009
        
        
            In the multichannel, customer-driven world in which we live, the pressure to meet ever-increasing information demands has never been more acute or complex. Yet, the birth of the Extensible Markup Language (XML) file format and the component content management (CCM) systems that leverage XML provide us with the tools to meet those demands. But tools are just that, tools to be used, and without a broader understanding and strategy for their use, they are of little value...
    
        
            Retailers look to KM to drive business 
        
        
            
                Phil Britt //
                    02 Jan 2009
        
        
            In this difficult economic climate, retailers face more daunting challenges than ever. Many are using knowledge management solutions to help improve sales and their bottom line. The tools help retailers in such areas as managing inventories, driving marketing programs, targeting and retaining customers, and providing superior customer service... 
    
                
        
            News Analysis
    
        
            Speaking in tongues, Part 2:
 Foreign language KM technologies 
        
        
            
                Greg Pepus //
                    02 Jan 2009
        
        
            This article is the second of a two-part series on foreign language knowledge management technologies that can help you meet those foreign language challenges. In the first article (in the July/August 2007 issue of KMWorld), I focused on foreign language tools to support unstructured text mining software, which provides users with natural language processing, language identification, transliteration and name normalization capabilities.
    
        
            Google’s chrome-plated bulldozer 
        
        
            
                Stephen E. Arnold //
                    02 Jan 2009
        
        
            
    
        
            Everything is fragmented— The core principles 
        
        
            
                Dave Snowden //
                    02 Jan 2009
        
        
            In an earlier column, I wrote about the science of complex adaptive systems (see Nov./Dec. 2008 KMWorld), which is a key piece of underlying theory to help us comprehend the increasingly interdependent and co-evolving worlds of knowledge management, social computing and learning... 
    
                
                
                 
                COLUMNS:
                
                
        
            David Weinberger
    
        
            What crowds are wise at 
        
        
            
                David Weinberger //
                    02 Jan 2009
        
        
            "...now we slap the "wisdom of the crowd" or "crowd sourcing" label on everything, as if to say: "Nope. You got your assumptions wrong. Get 'em right, and we can build the world's greatest encyclopedia, replace network TV and find lost cufflinks...
    
                
        
            The Future of the Future
    
        
            The Future of the Future:
From nomads to knowmads:
Knowledge cities rise from the desert sands 
        
        
            
                Art Murray, D.Sc. //
                    02 Jan 2009