Libraries as innovation incubators
One way in which libraries are evolving their relevance is through the establishment of co-working business incubators.
One way in which libraries are evolving their relevance is through the establishment of co-working business incubators.
The results of two recent surveys are showing that the predictions in the book The Fourth Turning were right on the mark.
Two studies in 2001 found that libraries do not manage knowledge as well as they manage information. Has anything changed since, and should things change?
Fake news would cease to be a problem if people stopped falling for it and circulating it, so there’s much that we as media consumers can do.
The US media appears doomed to suffer Putin-style media conferences from President Trump. But the media are far from innocent victims.
Journal publishers are initiating content sharing and agreeing to open access demands, but the predatory journal problem is on the rise.
Let’s take a look back at some notable knowledge management issues that arose through 2016 and some of the highlights from RealKM.
Implicit in the terms “post-truth” and “post-truth politics” is the view that the global information landscape has undergone a dramatic and sudden shift. But is this really the case?
We need to radically change the way in which we work with the community: we need to listen to and understand people’s stories, and work collaboratively with them to implement change.
Information professionals are advocating for policy in support of information management, but knowledge management professionals don’t appear to be doing the same.