After reading a blog by Stu Downes on “My Personal Knowledge Management Systems“, I have created my own knowledge management system to collect, sort and store useful artifacts, blogs, articles and bits I find on the web.

Here is my Personal Knowledge Management System:

Personal Knowledge Management System

Feedly

I am using this to collect the stories from blogs and web sites I regularly ready. A good tip picked up in the office today from a colleague. This allows you to scan the articles in a few minutes on a single screen without going via multiple sites. Using a series of key strokes you can read the headlines, then move down the articles, opening each one on the screen if you so wish.  Speedy blog scanning here I come.

Instapaper

I am using Instapaper to store the articles that I lie. Ive not gone as far as linking Feedly to Instapaper yet as I am just starting out with this combination and cant really justify the $5 a month ($45 year) for the Feedly premium version that allows the links to be created. Will see how useful it would be.

So at the moment it will be a manual solution, whilst I work out its value.

Twitter

Apart from my normal twitter account (link at the side of the screen) I now have a twitter account to show what I am currently reading. @HemingwayReads

Yes I could have done a link from Instapaper to my normal Twitter account, however I decided to keep this separate as too many apps wanting links into things does present possible security risks at some point. Also I thought @HemingwayReads was akin to “Being Ernest” – yes a play on words.

Publishing my Blog

My blog site publishes posts to other apps that I am use  such as LinkedIn and G+.

Over time my system will develop but works for me at the moment.

8 responses to “Personal Knowledge Management System”

  1. […] illustrated in my blog post on Personal Knowledge Management,  I have been keeping a journal since 2007 of personal thoughts and events in a Moleskine  […]

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  2. […] Max Hemingway: Personal Knowledge Management System […]

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  3. Feedly should link into Instapaper without the premium subscription. I have used the link for some time to send articles from Feedly to Instapaper reading list and I have never had the subscribed version.

    Just a point of interest, I have recently moved over to Pocket based on some better integrations with Evenote that Instapaper doesn’t have. Currently in the “assessing” stage.

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  4. […] my daily feeds from feedly I came across this post about a new Data Analysis and Statistical Inference course on Coursera […]

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  5. […] on from my Personal Knowledge Management System there are a couple of others shown in the diagram. This is just my quick classification of SMT […]

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  6. […] Max Hemingway: Personal Knowledge Management System […]

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  7. […] originally blogged about my Personal Knowledge Management System back in January 2015 and as we are beginning 2016 its time to review it again. I use my Personal […]

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  8. […] Max Hemingway: Personal Knowledge Management System […]

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