My thoughts turn to the Alzheimer’s patient. The system would have to record not just the “stuff” of his life, but his emotional response to it as well. It would need an invisible interface — voice recognition maybe to respond to inquiries — and a nearly instantaneous method of communicating back meaningful context. Otherwise he’s Guy Pearce in tats.
Hopefully we’re closer to beating Alzheimer’s than we are to ubiquitous tech-enabled recollection. Hopefully this is academic. (And by the way, Gemmell’s section on MyHealthBits — and Shirky’s popularization of ideas around crowdsourced health records, for that matter — will get us much of the way there.) Secondly, I wonder about the convergence of the Total Recall to come with the Total Access that’s already with us. The potential for interconnectedness between anyone’s and everyone’s lifestreams and the only-slightly-more-objective data cache of unfolding history — in the palm of your hand no less — is, well, paralyzing. So what are you doing?8 Major Trends That Will Change ECM in the Coming Years – Digital Landfill
Enterprise content management is already composed of a complex, broad set of ideas and technologies – over the next 5 years, a convergence of trends across multiple software categories will have a massive impact on this space.
Aaron Levie outlines the trends that will most impact the direction of the ECM market. These include the efficiencies of cloud computing, mobile productivity, expanded definitions of “content”, the integration potential of open API’s, ever more powerful search capability, increased collaboration functionality, social-ready features (and their contribution to folksonomy, I would think), and intelligent data mining.
The Content Process
…a process to reliably convert content into targetted results. It is not a black art. It is a comprehensive approach designed to accommodate all types of client, project and objective. At such a high level it inevitably misses detail around governance, communications and content creation. But followed with diligence and good judgement, it delivers hardworking, engaging content.
Twtpoll :: Results for: How much time do you spend each day curating content? (via @tpldrew)
How much time do you spend each day curating content?
http://twtpoll.com/php/charts.swf?library_path=http%3A%2F%2Ftwtpoll.com%2Fphp%2Fcharts_library&php_source=http%3A%2F%2Ftwtpoll.com%2Fphp%2Fchart_pie.php%3Fchd%3D4%2C2%2C4%2C3%26chco%3DB02B2C%2C4096EE%2C73880A%2C356AA0%26s%3D180%26time%3D0.78010500+1283190798&license=H1XZFJMEW9L.HSK5T4Q79KLYCK07EK
1 Hour
[ 31% (4 votes) ]2 Hours
[ 15% (2 votes) ]More than 2 Hours
[ 31% (4 votes) ]Less than 1 Hour I don’t curate any content
[ 23% (3 votes) ]Powered by Twtpoll
Interesting twtpoll by @tpldrew. (Also interesting Twitter tool!)
#wcconf on Slideshare
http://www.slideshare.net/fsearch/slideshow?q=%23wcconf
Collection of presentations from Content Strategy Conference
The Discipline of Content Strategy
By Kristina Halvorson, Brain Traffic
http://www.uie.com/articles/discipline_content_strategy
Includes definition, deliverables, and descriptions of related disciplines


