10:00 AM ~ 0 Comments ~ Written by f.vandekerkove

Search 2010, February, 19th in Paris : Best practices in strategic information search

Search 2010

The 3rd edition of Search will be held in Paris next February 19.

This day of workshops and discussions aims to identify and analyse best practices in strategic information search.

Each session will begin with a state of the art, presented by an independent expert who will lead the discussions:

  • How to choose a search engine? by Gilles Balmisse, Knowledge Consult
  • Competitive intelligence: what are the strategies of the solution providers? by Frederic Martinet, Actulligence
  • What are the impacts of social networks on our search practices? by Arnaud Rayrole, Useo
  • Search in 2010: overview and trends, by Marianne Dabbadie, Eval

Knowledge Plaza has been invited by Arnaud Rayrole to take part in discussions on the impact of social networks on organisations, their way of operating, and their practices.

We will be glad to share our testimony and experiences, including that from Entreprise et Personnel, one of our customers. To learn more about the program and get your free access badge, see www.search2010.org.

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  2. Happy winner of the CBS Pitch Minute 2010 competition

10:00 AM ~ 3 Comments ~ Written by e.benitoruiz

The state of Now

Enjoy this Pecha Kucha presentation on the state of now, the synchronous flux (or shall we say ‘barrage’?) of information and communication, using people as curators and a final question addressing you/us. By Antoine Perdaens, during the Pecha Kucha vol.10 that took place at the Bozar Museum (Brussels) in Nov. 6th.

Thank you to Ramón Suárez for sharing the video.

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11:30 AM ~ 0 Comments ~ Written by e.benitoruiz

Knowledge Plaza vs. Diigo: more than social web annotation

Dont mix apples and oranges

Don't mix apples and oranges

During the Q&A of the recent Betagroup, one of the attendees asked the following question: How is Knowledge Plaza different from Diigo? We answered there and then, Knowledge Plaza and Diigo are totally different apps, with different goals and focus.

At the goal and focus level:

We are addressing the professional and business needs: we have developed an app that lets professionals and small companies develop a centralized / internal place where their employees, partners or clients (or all of them) generate competitive intelligence around all the items they upload, share, discuss.

Consequently, this focus determines the differences found at the feature level:

  • It’s not only websites, but documents, pdfs, images, emails, vcards, etc. what you can upload.
  • Each item (we call it tiles, like a puzzle!) becomes a social object for it can be shared, commented, annotated and discussed.
  • You can relate these tiles, creating an connected network of social objects.
  • Collaborative discussion and creation is enabled by ‘mosaics’. A mosaic is a wiki-like feature that let members work collaboratively on a topic and relate it to tiles, etc. It is probably one of the most successful features (from our experience at KP Enterprise) for it’s the place where information turns into knowledge, by doing, sharing and discussing.
  • Create workspaces members can join, focusing on specific areas.
  • There is a very solid and flexible tier of permissions: you can set who access what, what’s visible or not. It’s not white or black, something like you either see an item or not. Contrarily, let’s imagine for a second that I have a a workspace on ‘experimental products (or services)’ where members are sharing stuff (docs, reports, diagrams, websites, contacts’ info, etc), and I have other workspace where I have invited partners etc. I decide whether I want my partners to see items shared on experimental products or not at all, if I grant them ‘access’, that accessibility can be full or limited, etc. There’s more to visibility than private vs public!
  • You are given your instance, with a unique url.
  • Different roles can be created. Of course that’s up to the administrator or owner of the instance.
  • It runs an amazing search engine: You find anything (relevant to your search, of course!)
  • Everything is RSS enabled, and you can create alerts and watchlists.
  • Export information as pdf.
  • Yes, of course, there’s a bookmarklet that does everything for you, fast.
  • Yes, of course, there’s a real-time dashboard where you can monitor what your network members are sharing and even doing (with the selective twitter status feature).
  • And a lot more…

But that’s only at the feature level. We have developed an app that’s flexible, and that’s why pretty much diverse companies from very different sectors are benefiting from it. For us the most important factor is what these companies are getting at the usage level, a place to engage with your colleagues’ knowledge and information and grow competitive intelligence.

Thus, to sum it up: Knowledge Plaza isn’t a social web annotation service. But a lot more.

Go and try yourself. Register for our private beta here.

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  2. Knowledge Plaza release: enterprise 2.0 for everyone
  3. Knowledge Plaza presentation at Betagroup