Posts Tagged ‘kennismanagement’

Website for Tam Tam Knowledge Browser

Friday, April 28th, 2006

Over the past week, we have had some interesting and enthousiastic reactions on Mart’s and my article on the Knowledge Browser, our new knowledge management solution for SharePoint 2003.

So we decided to dedicate a website to it. As from today, www.knowledgebrowser.net will be the home of the Tam Tam Knowledge Browser.

Knowledge Browser for SharePoint v1.00 released

Thursday, April 20th, 2006

I am proud to announce that today the first version (1.00) of the Knowledge Browser for SharePoint has been released to one of Tam Tam’s clients. The development team (Mart, Raymond, Robin, Stef and Wouter) has put much time, hard work and pondering in it to complete this first implementation in time. Cheers guys!

The Knowledge Browser is a customized knowledge base for SharePoint Portal Server 2003 that accommodates high-level navigating through a large collection of information by means of metadata. (more…)

The first European IA Summit (day 2)

Sunday, October 30th, 2005

Continued from The first European IA Summit (day 1).

As of this month, Europe has the EuroIA Summit. Yesterday, I posted my personal highlights of the first summit day, today my highlights of the second and last day of this year’s summit. (more…)

Filing and finding knowledge

Monday, October 3rd, 2005

Once you have decided to share your knowledge or managed that your professionals share theirs, the question arises how to deliver that knowledge. The possibilities are extensive: books, whitepapers, presentations, workshops, weblogs (blogs), you name it. The right medium depends on the content and the audience. But as long as the method does the job (communicating knowledge to its intended audience), it doesn’t really matter that much. (more…)

Knowledge management starts with sharing

Tuesday, September 27th, 2005

Many organizations struggle with ‘knowledge’. Everyone thinks it’s important, many try to spread knowledge among employees by creating a knowledge base on their intranet, but only few really succeed. What does it take to manage knowledge? It starts with sharing. (more…)