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"Poor metadata - bad subject lines, subject lines not changed..."
"Viruses, spam, flame wars..."
"Email is where knowledge goes to die"It was an excellent presentation and I wholeheartedly agree with Brian. I'm already using RSS, blogs, Wikis and Skype which were all mentioned by him as alternatives but I have been wary of IM, one of the other options he covered. But I am now going to give it a go, especially as May Chang gave some useful pointers to multi-protocol systems in her talk before lunch.
Karen:
ReplyDeleteNot that I necessarily care much, but the quote "email is where knowledge goes to die" was created by me in 1999 in Sydney Australia. Search Google for that exact quote. ;-)
Hi Bill,
ReplyDeleteLooking through my notes and the proceedings for the conference Brian Kelly did in fact cite the source of the quote as:
e-mail is where knowledge goes to die, Transforming Information into Knowledge at the Portal, Bill French, 22 April 2000 http://myst-technology.com/mysmartchannels/public/item/5994
Is that correct Bill or is there an earlier one?
Karen:
ReplyDeleteSorry for taking more than 2 years to respond. I was busy.
That's accurate - probably the first place it appeared in an authoritative and "findable" location on the web. ;-)
I think the actual quote first appeared in a Sydney newspaper, and it was also spread around a number of Aussie business publications.
The reason I happened upon your question is related to Gist (see gist.com) - a system that may possibly revive dead knowledge in email.
Cheers! --bf
Hi Bill,
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year
Thanks for the confirmation :-) Also thanks for the heads up on Gist. I did wonder at first why I would want to use it when I have an excellent desktop search tool on all my machines but I now see that it does a lot, lot more than that. I have applied to join the beta and am looking forward to trying it out.
Regards
Karen