I'll be honest, I'm envious of those people that are able to attend the Open Source Content Management System Summit (OSCMS). As Boris Mann pointed out in his post, the interest in the conference was so overwhelming that registration closed as quickly as it opened. I sat on the fence in my decision to go or not to go way too long that I was flat out of luck. That's alright though. I wouldn't have wanted to take up someone's seat who may have been more deserving of attending OSCMS. While I spend a lot of time writing about CMS, a lot of the people in the crowd spend a lot of time creating their project's CMS. Those people deserve to be in front of the line.
I'm hoping someone does a good job blogging about the events at OSCMS and even record a session or to via video. The OSCMS schedule looks like a good one and I'm well pleased to hear that it's not just Drupal that will be represented. I for one, would have had an interest to attend the Alfresco session as well as Jeff Robin's discussion on whether Drupal is also an enterprise solution.
In the past couple years we've learned how a CMS (used at the enterprise level for years) can be used to improve personal, social, and collaboration Web sites. However, while it's easy to understand the purpose of a blog on the Internet a number of us are still scratching our head wondering if a blog is beneficial on the company's Intranet. I really feel the next big challenge is trying to figure to out how integrate what we've learned about Web 2.0 right back into the enterprise.