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David Loshin

Welcome to my BeyeNETWORK Blog. This is going to be the place for us to exchange thoughts, ideas and opinions on all aspects of the information quality and data integration world. I intend this to be a forum for discussing changes in the industry, as well as how external forces influence the way we treat our information asset. The value of the blog will be greatly enhanced by your participation! I intend to introduce controversial topics here, and I fully expect that reader input will "spice it up." Here we will share ideas, vendor and client updates, problems, questions and, most importantly, your reactions. So keep coming back each week to see what is new on our Blog!

About the author >

David is the President of Knowledge Integrity, Inc., a consulting and development company focusing on customized information management solutions including information quality solutions consulting, information quality training and business rules solutions. Loshin is the author of The Practitioner's Guide to Data Quality Improvement, Master Data Management, Enterprise Knowledge Management: The Data Quality Approach and Business Intelligence: The Savvy Manager's Guide. He is a frequent speaker on maximizing the value of information. David can be reached at loshin@knowledge-integrity.com or at (301) 754-6350.

Editor's Note: More articles and resources are available in David's BeyeNETWORK Expert Channel. Be sure to visit today!

After yesterday's webcast with Dataflux, I had lunch with Daniel Teachey, Ron Agresta, and Carmen Gardiner (all from Dataflux), and we talked about some of the topics we covered during the web seminar (which you can read about in my white paper), but we also talked about the potential of a successful blog. One theme that emerged was the value of the evolving community of interest that may form, either based on topic, or personality, or avocation. For me, this is almost self-referential, since part of my area of interest involves the emergence of small communities based on connectivity - something I may explore more carefully in an upcoming article...


Posted September 28, 2005 4:53 AM
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