Bill Ives has listed a number (15 currently) of KM blogs in Some Knowledge Management Blogs (plus more in the comments). Beyond the obvious blogs that talk about knowledge management, there are many people covering the topic as part of their larger blogging interest. KnowledgeBoard has a listing of KM blogs. I know Bill wasn't attempting to be exhaustive, but here are some more that I read regularly.
- Conniecto from Gabriela Avram, an academic and consultant in Romania
- Croeso from Andy Boyd with Royal Dutch Shell
- Dubbings and Diversions from Jeremy Aarons, who is doing a PhD in the direction of KM
- excited utterances from Joy London on legal technology and KM
- Far Wise in Knowledge Management from Carla Verwijs, a colleague of Lilia Efimova (Mathemagenic)
- Goiaba Knowledge Bridge from Olaf Brugman
- How do you know that? from Christopher Smith
- The Pragmatics of KM Equals Success from "Skip" at ITToolbox blogs
- Knowledgeline from Tom, Mark and Allie with a bent toward law firm KM
- Mopsos gets my attention frequently
- Myndsi from Alison Pope, who focuses on librarianship issues that I find strongly connected to KM
- Networks, Complexity and Relatedness from Patti Anklam, who leans toward social network analysis
- ...no straight lines... from Brett Miller
- Perfect Path from Lloyd Davis with a KM consultancy
- Psybertron Knowledge Modeling from Ian Glendinning, another engineer-by-training
- Reflexions infrequent posts from Steve Barth, who publishes widely on personal knowledge management
- scale|free from Anu Gupta
- Scrapbook of My Life from Rosanna Tarsiero with a focus on community
- Seblogging from Sebastian Fiedler on cognition and blogging
- SoulSoup from Anol Bhattacharya, coming out of e-learning
- Ton's Interdependent Thoughts from Ton Zylstra with a strong focus on blogging
- x28's Blog from Matthias Melcher with discussion of PKM and KM
- yet another f*$#&@! learning experience from Michael Jones
There are many more amongst the 200+ feeds in my aggregator that talk about KM or personal KM or personal effectiveness. I've given up on a blogroll for now, but I see possible value for this kind of exercise. I could see that tying to a del.icio.us or other social bookmarking tool would be an interesting way to tag these blogs, and see how others think about the same blogs.