31st
July
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
My friend Steve has been using the ILOG Rules for .NET product (which you can now download for an extended trial as I discussed here) and has written a nice little review of it - Lab test: ILOG Rules for .Net meshes well with Microsoft. There’s a lot to like in the .Net version of [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules |
30th
July
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Ann All had a post on Agile development brings IT, business together that had the great phrase “application development 2.0″. In the article she mentioned some very worthy objectives for this 2.0 version of application development. Here they are, paraphrased slightly.
Encourage close collaboration between developers and end users
Involve users in quality assurance processes
Don’t use traditional [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Rules |
28th
July
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
I got a chance to speak with ILOG today and do some thinking so it’s time to write more about the IBM and ILOG announcement. As it is an acquisition of one publicly traded company by another neither company can legally say very much. As a result I, like everyone else, have a bunch of [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management, Business Rules, Decision Management, Event Processing, Optimization, Product News, SOA |
28th
July
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Just heard that ILOG is going to be acquired by IBM! I don’t have any more detail yet but hopefully the folks at ILOG and IBM will brief me sometime soon…..
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posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management, Business Rules, News, Optimization |
10th
July
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
ioSemantics is a company focused on automating and improving the QA process within decision management. Focused on increasing agility, ioSemantics is developing new technology to improve the link from development to production, especially in the kind of tight operate - assess - adapt - redeploy loop you see when business rules are being used [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules, Product News |
1st
July
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
I am a firm believer in getting the technology for decision management into the hands of those who might use it - I often feel that people just don’t understand what’s possible. The folks over at ILOG have been offering a 6 month JRules trial since last fall. This full version has everything but the [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules, Product News |
23rd
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
There was more discussion in the blogosphere about the James McGovern COBOL is Evil post - COBOL is not evil, but COBOL programmers are. Now I already posted a response to James’ post (Why don’t you replace COBOL with something useful - not Java) but this new post made me think. I should say that [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Rules, Legacy Modernization |
27th
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
One of the most fun things we did in the book was write about real success stories. We used an “Old Way” v “EDM Way” model for these. In the past I have written some blog posts using a similar style and today I have a new one.
Old Way
An online pharmacy (that the country trusts, [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules, Customer Experience, Decision Management, Healthcare |
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 [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Data Mining, Decision Management, News, Predictive Analytics, SOA |
9th
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Mike made an interesting comment in response to my recent post on the future of application development. He said:
Are business domain tools necessary to enable a non-trivial development role for businesspeople?
Like many good questions the answer is complicated - in a way, both yes and no. I do agree with Mike that a non-trivial role [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules, Decision Management |