Discover the keys to successful teams in the riveting book "Team of Teams". It's not only a gripping recount of the War on Terror but a deep dive into autonomy, shared consciousness, and action-driven results in business organizations. See how data strategy, literacy and culture unite with business and military strategies. #Teamwork #BusinessStrategy #DataAI #InformationManagement 📚💼📊🔗
https://community.datentreiber.com/2025/09/18/team-of-teams/?fsp_sid=234
Your communication isn’t just paperwork — it’s a process.
Emails, letters, and files shouldn’t get lost. They should move with purpose.
With ONE ECM’s Smart Correspondence Management System, turn cluttered communication into clear, trackable workflows.
Faster approvals. Better compliance. Total control.
Ready to simplify and scale your correspondence? Book a demo today: https://oneecm.com/correspondence-management #Correspondence #UnitedArabEmirates #SaudiArabia #InformationManagement
ONE ECM

Digital Transformation Expertise built from years of experience, implementation, best practices and support

ONE ECM
So, we will NEVER learn 🤷‍♀️ ??? <= "Supported by [*]Clarivate[*], this session is designed for library and information professionals who are curious about AI and looking to build confidence in using and supporting AI tools"
#librarians #BUs #informationmanagement #lobbies #AI #wolvesandlambs
I Tried Every Todo App and Ended Up With a .txt File - Alireza Bashiri

Alireza Bashiri
My new blog post is live! 'Why You'll Need a Personal Knowledge Management System in 2025' explores how to manage information overload and build your 'digital brain' using a Zettelkasten. Read it here: https://www.ctnet.co.uk/why-youll-need-a-personal-knowledge-management-system-in-2025/ #PKM #Zettelkasten #InformationManagement
Why You'll Need a Personal Knowledge Management System in 2025

Future-proof your knowledge! Learn to start a Zettelkasten in 2025 and conquer information overload. Practical PKM advice inside.

The Computer & Technology Network
gptel-org-tools update.

1. Cloned to
https://codeberg.org/bajsicki/gptel-org-tools, and all future work will be happening on Codeberg.
2. Added
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.
3. Added docstrings for the functions called by the tools, so LLMs can look up their definitions.
4. Improved the precision of some tool descriptions so instructions are easier to follow.
5. Some minor improvements w/r/t function names and calls, logic, etc. Basic QA.

Now, as a user:
1. I'm finding it increasingly frustrating that Gemma 3 refuses to follow instructions. So here's a PSA: Gemma 3 doesn't respect the system prompt. It treats it just the same as any other user input.
2. Mistral 24B is a mixed bag. I'm not sure if it's my settings or something else, but it fairly consistently ends up looping; it'll call the same tool over and over again with the exact same arguments. This happens with other models as well, but not nearly as frequently.
3. Qwen 2.5 14B: pretty dang good, I'd say. The Cogito fine-tune is also surprisingly usable.
4. Prompting: I have found that a good, detailed system prompt tends to /somewhat/ improve results, especially if it contains clear directions on where to look for things related to specific topics. I'm still in the middle of writing one that's accurate to my Emacs set-up, but when I do finish it, it'll be in the repository as an example.
5. One issue that I still struggle with is that the LLMs don't take any time to process the user request. Often they'll find some relevant information in one file, and then decide that's enough and just refuse to look any further. Often devolving into traversing directories /as if/ they're looking for something... and they get stuck doing that without end.

It all boils down to the fact that LLMs aren't intelligent, so while I have a reasonable foundation for the data collection, the major focus is on creating guardrails, processes and inescapable sequences. These will (ideally) railroad LLMs into doing actual research and processing before they deliver a summary/ report based on the org-mode notes I have.

Tags:
#Emacs #gptel #codeberg #forgejo #orgmode #orgql #llm #informationmanagement #gptelorgtools

PS. Links should work now, apparently profile visibility affects repo visibility on Codeberg. I would not have expected that.

PPS. Deleted and reposted because of strong anti-bridge sentiment on my part. Screw Bluesky and bots that repost to it. Defederated: newsmast.*
gptel-org-tools

Tooling for LLM interactions with org-mode. Requires gptel and org-ql.

Codeberg.org
Reading RSS content is a skilled activity

Shit's gotten weird out there. The internet has devolved from something that was mostly quirky and altruistic to something that, in many ways, is straight-up evil. Enter RSS: An opportunity to reclaim your attention through simple and open tech.

"Proposing a Conceptual Framework for Social Listening in Libraries: A Potential Game Changer to Engage Gen Z and Centennial Users" https://doi.org/10.1515/opis-2024-0012 #libraries #GenZ #GenAlpha #SocialListening #InformationManagement
Proposing a Conceptual Framework for Social Listening in Libraries: A Potential Game Changer to Engage Gen Z and Centennial Users

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.

De Gruyter

Content Management Analyst Job with the (non-profit) MasterCard Foundation

They're looking for "Knowledge Management, Information Management, and/or Library Science with expertise in taxonomy, records management, and information management processes."

https://job-boards.greenhouse.io/mastercardfoundation/jobs/7783112002?fbclid=IwY2xjawIcmspleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHerHZl6CkiU83i7NjygfvnERih_hOH-mNGm_5JPIy-tL0i9ViNSExs9T9w_aem_DElixzWbt-4ZEa4eShN8jg

#jobs #informationManagement #contentManagement #knowledgeManagement

Analyst, Content Management

Canada

How do you organize your tech notes? I'm thinking almost of going with one single document, with a TOC, and just adding notes within that. CTRL-F is pretty effective at finding keywords

I was thinking about using Obsidian - I already have some notes in there and I like markdown - but search within it seems a little bit limited.

I need effective search for things like - finding old bash scripts, syntax for assorted Kali tools, network configuration, lists of frameworks and standards, etc etc - the stuff that you kind of know about but forget the detail when you don't use it for months at a time.

#informationmanagement #knowledgemanagement #notetaking #notes #study #obsidian