Common speech reflects this fact. When we say "e-book", we
mean both the device and the content we access on it. As
technologies such as digital ink and printable integrated
circuits mature - hardware and software will have completed
their inevitable merger.
This erasure of boundaries has led to the emergence of
knowledge management solutions and personal and shared
workspaces. The LOCATION of a document (one's own computer, a
colleague's PDA, or a web page) has become irrelevant. The
NATURE of the document (e-mail message, text file, video
snippet, soundbite) is equally unimportant. The SOURCE of the
document (its extension, which tells us on which software it
was created and can be read) is increasingly meaningless.
Universal languages (such as Java) allow devices and
applications to talk to each other. What matters are
accessibility and logical and user-friendly work-flows.
Enter Enfish. In its own words, it provides:
"...Personalized portal solution linking personal and
corporate knowledge with relevant information from the
Internet, .
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