|
Services: Knowledge Portals · Knowledge Map · Knowledge Network · Book of Knowledge · NEWS· INFORMATION
Channels: General Business · Business Technology · E-Business · Knowledge Management Community: Join the Network! · Global Network · Events Calendar · Executive Jobs |
|
Posted by Tom Sudman on March 16, 1998 at 14:23:17:
In Reply to: Re: Difficulties with Information Theory posted by Craig Maudlin on March 12, 1998 at 19:18:03:
Craig,
I have studied the intersection and differentiation of knowledge and information for many years. I find that theory and practice have to develop new shared and deeper meanings of vocabulary. However what you are stating and the citations you are bringing into play are consistent with what I find in practice: information in absense of a tacit or explicit knowledge process has no value. Its value comes in the process that it helps "fuel" and/or for which it acts as potential "fuel storage". Information is a artifact of the process. Thanks for the focus you brought to this issue.
Tom
Click Here to Post Follow Up in New Forums
Download Our Articles and Interviews
[Guru Interviews] [Real Time Enterprise Business Processes] [IT Users Motivation] [IT Users Commitment] [Commitment and Motivation] [Inquiring Organizations] [Social Influences] [Customer Relationship Management] [Supply Chain Management] [IT Adoption and Utilization] [Managing and Measuring Knowledge Assets] [The Real Competitive Advantage] [Why IT and KM Systems Fail] [Myths About Expertise Management]
[How 'Best Practices' Become 'Worst Practices'] [Beyond Information Ecology to Knowledge Ecosystems] [Knowledge Exchanges and Social Networks] [Why Expert Systems Aren't Enough]
[KM for E-Business Performance]
[Does KM=IT? Not!]
[Other Articles and Interviews]
About BRINT | News About BRINT | Help & FAQs | Users Guide | Advertise
Make BRINT your Start Page | | Link to BRINT | Submit Articles
Terms of Use | Privacy | © Copyright 1994-2007, BRINT Institute, New York, USA