20th
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Just saw the announcement that Tibco is buying Insightful. Insightful has a range of data mining tools build on the open source R algorithms as well as some proprietary pieces. This means that Tibco now has a BPM environment, a rules/event processing one, Spotfire for visualization and data mining/predictive analytics development and deployment. In theory [...]
Read more
posted by James Taylor in Business Intelligence, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Data Mining, Event Processing, Event-Driven Architecture, Predictive Analytics, Product News |
19th
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Back from the Intalio User Conference and thought I would post a few thoughts post-event. Overall I was very impressed by the event - it was well organized and executed, free wifi, plenty of power in the rooms etc. I was a little disappointed that there were not more user case studies but I suspect [...]
Read more
posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management |
18th
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Shao Fang presented the D3 (Demand Driven Development) program and their work on integrating business rules into the Intalio BPMS. A few notes on the D3 program:
Not custom development
Community suggested projects
Customers put up money for features they really want and get credit for them
Some are decoupled and done offshore, some more tightly integrated and done [...]
Read more
posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management, Business Rules, Product News |
18th
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Dan Oneufer talked about the use of Intalio BPMS in Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania Justice Network has been established a long time and manages many aspects of the state justice system. However the counties are not well integrated into this network. Allegheny County, his example, is about 10% of the state and pretty rural. It has [...]
Read more
posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management, Government |
18th
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Ismael Ghalimi presented his vision of “what’s next” and started with some history. In 1998 he started work on what he now calls “Office 2.0″ and, while prototyping ideas, he met the other founders and started to put together a plan for a platform that would allow him (a self-confessed poor programmer) to build web [...]
Read more
posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management, News |
17th
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Bruce Silver led a panel on business-empowerment and BPMN. He emphasized that BPM is an approach, BPMS is a software stack for supporting this new approach AND that there is change in how business and IT work together. Business-empowered implementation is what he uses to describe this - no break between the business view [...]
Read more
posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management |
17th
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Greg Olsen from Coghead presented how they are using Intalio’s BPMS. Greg is a believer in “small BPM” - something to extend and enhance something else. Greg’s experience led him to conclude that some basic database/process capabilities could be very useful to non-developers. Coghead was a platform as a service play from the beginning and [...]
Read more
posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management, SaaS, web 2.0 |
17th
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
First session is Doug Neal from CSC on “New Aspirations for BPM - Green and Global”. Doug took us back to 2001 when BPM was new and reminded us that the driver was a need for change (that could not be supported by the ERP systems of the time). How we manage change has [...]
Read more
posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management, Green IT |
13th
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Joe McKendrick in his Eye on the Enterprise blog had a post on legacy modernization - Time to Cut COBOL from Life Support in which he referenced a post by James McGovern The mainframe is not evil, but COBOL is… in which James says
that there’s no reason why aging COBOL apps can’t be replaced with [...]
Read more
posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Decision Management, Enterprise Applications, Legacy Modernization, News |
21st
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
I can’t blog this session live as John Rymer and Mike Gualtieri have asked me to participate. What follows is a combination of thoughts based on the presentation and post-presentation notes.
The theme of the presentation is that “The next frontier in business process management (BPM) and business rules is automating decisions within business processes”. If [...]
Read more
posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Data Mining, Decision Management, News, Predictive Analytics, SOA |