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This page displays entries posted by all DITA XML.org bloggers in chronological order. You may also view entries by author or blog name as well as a list of DITA-related blogs on external sites.

In pursuit of the ultimate techCom information architecture

Is uncertainty making release management difficult?

Have you lost control over which topic versions belongs to which product releases? Is the same type of information floating around in many different topics in the CMS? If the answer is yes, this is the blog post for you, since it suggest a solution, based on almost 15 years of modular documentation experience, for effective release management.

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In pursuit of the ultimate techCom information architecture

For whom are you designing?

Have you reflected on what type of information you include in a manual? Meaning, for whom are you designing and writing? Your manual(s) contains certain type of information, but who needs the information, when, to do what? This blog post tries to sort it all out. Read it to find out what type of technical communicator you are.

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In pursuit of the ultimate techCom information architecture

... and those are the reasons to why you should read Jonatan’s blog

It is time to conclude on the purpose of my blog. What am I trying to say? What do I want to accomplish? What benefits will my blog bring to my readers? Well, read this blog post to find out.

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idtp

NLDITA Winter 2011: call for speakers

For the upcoming NLDITA Winter Special we are calling speakers and sponsors to participate. Subject of the conference is : localization and translation of DITA and XML content.

Conditions for speaking or presenting at NLDITA Winter Special 2011:

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In pursuit of the ultimate techCom information architecture

Are personas an effective tool when developing end user assistance?

As a technical communicator, you often start by categorize users into user groups where each user groups is given a name, for example Network engineer, System administrator, Operator etc. To make the user group come alive, you develop personas to represent each user group. But how do you, as a technical communicator, actually develop user groups and personas? And how do you determine what type of information to write and how to classify and organize information in deliverables based on a set of personas?

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