 Survey of frequency of mention of IT-related terms in the literature per study by Ping Wang.It would appear that the decline of KM since this paper was written has followed that of the other terms.
What I'm Thinking of Writing (and Podcasting) About Soon:
Coping With the Strategy Paradox:
I met recently with Michael Raynor, who wrote The Strategy Paradox.
He's now looking at what else we can do to deal with this paradox, and
he poked some holes in my argument that what we need is resilience, not
planning.
The Evolving Role of the Information Professional:
Since I listed the five major 'products' of my new employer, some
people have suggested that this list might define the new role of the
information professional in all sorts of organizations.
A Coming Class/Generational War?:
Exploding economic disparity, and the widening wealth and opportunity
gap between the old and the young, may be sowing the seeds for a class
war between the old & wealthy, and the young & poor, that could
transcend geographic borders.
Why We Need a Public Persona:
The journey to know yourself is the first step towards understanding
how the world works and becoming truly yourself, which is necessary
before you can make the world a little better. As de Mello said, this
journey is mostly about getting rid of the everybody-else stuff that
has become attached to us as part of our social conditioning, and
getting rid of this stuff is perhaps what ee cummings meant when he
said the hardest thing is to be nobody-but-yourself when the world is
relentlessly trying to make you everybody-else. From birth, we pick up
all this everybody-else stuff that clings to us and changes us, muddies
us. We are rewarded by society for doing so. I find the 'figments of
reality' thesis helpful in this hard work -- realizing that our minds
are nothing more than problem-detection systems evolved by the organs
of our bodies for their purposes, not 'ours'. That 'we' are, each 'one'
of us, a collective, a complicity. What makes it so hard is that
becoming nobody-but-yourself opens you up to accusations of being
anti-social, weird, self-preoccupied, arrogant etc. So we end up, I
think, having to adopt a public persona that is, to some extent, not
genuine, not 'us' at all. That's hard. How can we make this public
persona as thin and transparent as possible?
The Water Crisis:
The disappearance of fresh water is likely to be the first wave of the
future cascading crises of global warming. Ironically, the second wave
is likely to be floods.
Vignette #6
Blog-Hosted Conversation #2:
This week (a bit delayed, sorry) I'll be publishing my narrated, edited interview of Jon
Husband, which I recorded earlier this week, on hierarchy, community
and education, and recording a third
interview.
Possible Open Thread Question:
We
know people judge us by appearances. To what extent, do you think, does
the way we make ourselves appear affect our own sense of identity, our
ability to be nobody-but-ourself? If we looked and behaved exactly the
way we wanted and felt, what would happen to us? Is our illusory
'right' to dress and appear the way we want to, part of the way society
keeps us from being who we really are? |
5:14:14 PM
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