Archive for the ‘Single-source publishing’ Category

The Knowledge Mashup

It’s the world according to YOU. It’s about you getting the information you want want when you want it. It’s about accessing content from open and collaborative sources, then filtering and focusing that content to meet unique documentation, training, and other educational needs. It’s personalized, real-time information delivered directly to your computer devices. That’s the [...]

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February 5, 2010 · Michael Hiatt · One Comment
Posted in: Cloud Computing, Information Age, Knowledge management, Mashups, Semantic Web, Single-source publishing

The Myth of Single-Source Authoring

Single-source publishing is a zombie idea that revives itself periodically and refuses to stay dead. Its zombie supporters chant its purported benefits as a “write once, publish to many” promise and ploddingly follow it as their ultimate goal for mechanized authoring and machine translation. As an object-oriented writing methodology, it is as human as present-day [...]

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November 18, 2009 · Michael Hiatt · 25 Comments
Tags: , , ,  · Posted in: Contextual Data, Information management, Knowledge management, Linked data, Mashups, Single-source publishing