Weblogs, Portals, and KM | Articles about the convergence of blogs, k-logs, and portals. | |
By Bill French, MyST Technology Partners, Inc.
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| | | July 19, 2004 | | The notion of a kLog (knowledge weblog) is vague until you cast a specific business information objective. | |
I've recently tried to define (for my own benefit) what a kLog is and what an example might
look like. Perhaps this is like describing beauty—describing it in words is
difficult, but you know it when you see it.
I think a weblog (or any collection of time-based, free-flowing
business content) is a kLog when it provides an increased capacity to act
more intelligently. A good example of a kLog can be seen when you combine Office
XP Smart Tags with MySmartChannels.
What’s an example of how a Smart Tag and a channel might work
together?
Imagine you have a channel that documents contract negotiations with a number
of clients. For each client, you create channel items with the client’s name as
the item title. Further, imagine that your team of eight (and you)
continually update these items with the latest information about ongoing
negotiations and issues. This is a group note-pad of thoughts, ideas, and
challenges of getting the work done. Since each of your staffers are subscribed
to the channel (for Office XP Smart Tags), in every document, every e-mail, and
every slide presentation referencing your client names, Smart Tags would be
automatically present in the Office documents. This happens automatically and
without any human intervention. It allows your staff to immediately
access the channel content without thinking about where it is, or what the
discrete URL's might be. Your team is able to immediately put their hands
on the latest information about a client from any Office document that includes
the client's name.

Further, imagine that other people (not on your staff) need to be kept
informed about the contract progressions. They require access
to information, but only with viewing rights.
MySmartChannels, is able to share access with appropriate read-only
permissions. This makes it possible for people that are peripheral to your
team, to gain the same access to links (and insights) from
any of their own Office documents that reference your client
negotiation content. To be clear about this amazing functionality - it means
that any Office documents - even ones that you
and your team are not reading or writing, will contain automatic references to
your channel content based on each subscriber's granted
permissions.
Integrating Office XP with MySmartChannels is one way to transform what
appears to be a simple Weblog, into a kLog. Like I said, you know it when you see it... | | |
| | July 19, 2004 | | Integrating weblogs with IM tools will soon be commonplace, but it requires API agility. | |
In my view, one of the
many possible ways to transform weblogs into kLogs is to integrate them with other enterprise information
tools; instant messaging is a good example. But when you tackle this idea, come
prepared with XML API support. This is not just about posting an item to one
blog account. Search requires different XML feeds than processes like selecting
the channel you want to focus on, or publish to. The MyST XML API provides a
collection of possibilities that makes it quick work when integrating with
XML-aware platforms.
Using ActiveBuddy
we were able to create a fairly powerful collection of integration services that
allow authenticated MyST users to freely "converse" with channels to do things
like search, read, and compose. We've only scratched the surface on this idea
but I anticipate many types of solutions that have the potential to address a
wide variety problems for information workers.
If this is something your company can benefit from, give us a call - we're implementing
IM-independent platform solutions with MySmartChannels on a consulting
basis. | | |
| | July 19, 2004 | | We recently used a very powerful (but unseen) capability in the MyST platform to build portions of kLogNews.com. | |
"The more I talk with 'real people working in real companies' (meaning:
not nerds spending their whole days hacking), the more convinced I am that a
news aggregator is the ideal center for any Intranet." —Paolo
Valdemarin
The entire site (http://klognews.com/) is fundamentally based on the
aggregation concept and requirements articulated in Paolo's Weblog post. As an
example, emergic.org is syndicated at klognews.com.
To achieve this, we simply had to create a resource in MyST that identifies
RSS content as an aggregation source. All other aspects of the process happen
naturally through XSLT rules-based models, including style and scheme of the
presentation.
The MyST platform addresses each of Paolo's stated server-side aggregation
requirements; it also goes a step further in terms of scraping. Scraping is
useful in some cases, but is decidedly brittle. MyST uses a scriptable "channel
gear" that provides powerful content integration capabilities with things like
Amazon's API, RSS, RDF, Google's API, and screen scraping through an xHTML
parser. The unique aspect of channel gears is that they are built in concert
with our business logic plug-ins (an API for business process scripting
involving channels). All items [regardless of their source] fall under the MyST
user's security context so search, RSS feeds, etc, all conform to the security
and permissions model. | | |
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