In a galaxy far, far away when I was at PwC we caught Lotus Notes religion and we created databases for every thing - sales, recruiting, favorite restaurants. I think the IT group was shocked at how virally that technology was adopted in a conservative firm (and more scaringly, the duplication and storage cost to the firm).
Courtesy of Jeff Nolan, I saw this post by Brian Keairns's post on top 10 applications for an enterprise wiki...Brian, I could dig up a list of 1,000 I think I still have from my PwC days...but then again, may be that genie should stay bottled up.
Comments
The Attack of the Wiki Clones
In a galaxy far, far away when I was at PwC we caught Lotus Notes religion and we created databases for every thing - sales, recruiting, favorite restaurants. I think the IT group was shocked at how virally that technology was adopted in a conservative firm (and more scaringly, the duplication and storage cost to the firm).
Courtesy of Jeff Nolan, I saw this post by Brian Keairns's post on top 10 applications for an enterprise wiki...Brian, I could dig up a list of 1,000 I think I still have from my PwC days...but then again, may be that genie should stay bottled up.
The Attack of the Wiki Clones
In a galaxy far, far away when I was at PwC we caught Lotus Notes religion and we created databases for every thing - sales, recruiting, favorite restaurants. I think the IT group was shocked at how virally that technology was adopted in a conservative firm (and more scaringly, the duplication and storage cost to the firm).
Courtesy of Jeff Nolan, I saw this post by Brian Keairns's post on top 10 applications for an enterprise wiki...Brian, I could dig up a list of 1,000 I think I still have from my PwC days...but then again, may be that genie should stay bottled up.
June 21, 2006 in Industry Commentary | Permalink