Integration projects fail because they solve the wrong problem.
Data silos persist not because systems are incompatible — but because ownership is undefined.
The technical bridge cannot survive without the governance foundation.
🧵
Integration projects fail because they solve the wrong problem.
Data silos persist not because systems are incompatible — but because ownership is undefined.
The technical bridge cannot survive without the governance foundation.
🧵
You don't have a data problem. You have a context problem.
Every audit gap, lost decision, and silo divergence traces to the same root: data stored without the context that makes it meaningful.
The answer to "why did we decide this?" is never in the data. It's in the gap between the data and the person who created it.
Lifehack: Lists - I Tried Every Todo App & Ended Up With a .txt File
https://www.al3rez.com/todo-txt-journey
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44864134
My productivity app is a never-ending .txt file
https://jeffhuang.com/productivity_text_file
The append-and-review note | karpathy
https://karpathy.bearblog.dev/the-append-and-review-note
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44658745
gptel-org-tools update.gptel-org-tools-result-limit and a helper function for it. This sets a hard limit on the number of characters a tool can return. If it's over that, the LLM is prompted to be more specific in its query. Not applied to all tools, just the ones that are likely to blow up the context window. Reading RSS content is a skilled activity
https://www.doliver.org/articles/rss-as-a-skill
#HackerNews #ReadingRSS #RSS #ContentSkills #DigitalLiteracy #HackerNews #InformationManagement
This study explores the evolving needs of Generation Z (Gen Z) and Generation Alpha (Gen Alpha) users in the context of libraries, emphasizing the critical role of social listening as a tool for engagement. Social listening, a technique used by professionals to track online conversations and mentions about brands, products, and services, offers valuable insights into user preferences and behaviors. With Gen Z being the first to grow up with seamless access to the internet and Gen Alpha following closely, both generations exhibit distinct characteristics that challenge traditional methods of user engagement. These users prioritize digital interaction over physical spaces, reshaping how libraries function and the relevance of conventional services. Libraries are facing existential threats as they struggle to adapt to this generational shift, with traditional physical collections and spaces giving way to digital environments. This article aims to review existing literature on generational cohort, proposing a conceptual framework that integrates social listening into library management strategies. The framework will help library professionals better engage with these tech-savvy users, ensuring libraries’ survival and continued relevance in a rapidly digitizing world.