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by Lee Bryant

This is a Headshift blog post by Lee Bryant, written on November 18, 2003. It has (0) comments.

KM Europe 2003

KM Europe 2003 took place last week in the beautiful city of Amsterdam, and saw a gathering of software vendors, consultants and thinkers concerned with knowledge sharing and the role of knowledge and intangible assets generally on current management and organisational thinking.

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As an entirely commercial conference underwritten by the contributions of vendors who pay to exhibit, KM Europe provides little more than a venue for interested parties to get together and hear some interesting speakers. The lack of any wireless connectivity came as a great shock, which shows how we are stating to take it for granted, and would significantly improve the conference in future. Martin Roell received a tip-off that certain parts of the building could piggy back on the WLAN of a Borland developers' conference nearby, but by that time I had retreated to the city in search of access.

It was good to see some friendly faces such as Ton Zijlstra, Lilia Efimova, Ana Neves, Martin Roell and David Gurteen, and we had some good discussions on the role of Weblogs and social software in stimulating informal knowledge sharing more effectively than the bog-standard database, DMS, CMS and search systems that were being exhibited by vendors.

The main conference presentations are now available online.

See below for my notes of the main keynote presentations:

See below for my notes of two practitioner case studies:

See also:

Finally, there was also a masterclass by Mark McElroy, which I did not attend but came so highly recommended by Ana Neves that I must provide some background links about Mark's approach:

km_2003_logo.jpgKnowledge in Amsterdam: KM Europe reports and analysis