Open Source Knowledge

Karl Nelson writes in his Information Management Weblog about Open Source Knowledge

A few years back a professor I had talked about the shelf-life of knowledge. His point was that informaiton goes stale quickly, especially in the technology world. There isn't much value in keeping it locked away. The value, in the information and knowledge space, is in sharing what you know.

This is a very familiar thought about how knowledge works -- or how people work with knowledge. People believe their knowledge is so critical and important, but hoarding it and not "socializing" it with others pretty well ensures that it will go stale. I need to write, talk and listen to what other people have to say.

I've learned, simply by being willing to jump into conversation with other interested parties - in blogs, in person and other forums.

1 Comment(s)

Not seen Karl's weblog before, thanks for the link.

I think "socialising" is being a bit overdone (a bloggers / CoP view od the world), but I certainly agree with the point - it's not the content of information that makes it knowledge, but the human interaction with it (socially or whatever context).

Leave a comment


About this Entry

This entry was published on July 25, 2004 8:43 PM and has 1 comment(s).

Trackback

Categories:

Related Entries

Previous entry: Seeing the World on Ten Coffees a Day

Next entry: Annual Ammonia Symposium

Find recent content on the main index, explore the full tag cloud, or look in the archives to find all content.

Powered by Movable Type 4.21-en
Picture a steaming coffee cup. Better yet, grab one and have a read!

KJolt Memberships

Blogarama - The Blog Directory