21st
July
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
The folks at ILOG and Relativitiy recently announced a new integration between their products - Legacy IT Modernization enabled by ILOG and Relativity Technologies Business Rules Solutions. I got a chance to chat with them today about what was new and different in this latest attempt to bring legacy modernization and business rules together. Relativity’s [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules, Composite Applications, Enterprise Applications, Legacy Modernization, Product News |
8th
June
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
David Greer had a cutely named post this week - The Engine That Can. David and I had a nice chat about eOptimize a few days ago and I thought I would respond to his post with some thoughts of my own. eOptimize’s product is unlike those often described as decision management applications - it [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules, Enterprise Applications, News, Optimization |
21st
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
I’m going to be on stage with Mike Gualtieri soon but I thought I would drop in and listen to him on the future of application development. Sadly this meant missing a session on BI but even I can’t be in two places at once. Mike’s theme is that the value of application developers in [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Innovation, News, SOA, web 2.0 |
21st
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Dean Hager from Lawson came on to follow-up on the dynamic business applications story. Dynamic means “continuous change, activity, or progress” and Enterprise Applications “suck at this” to use his words. But this is a problem as the world is changing - people change, events cause change, the business climate changes and more. He asked [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Enterprise Applications, SOA |
21st
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Connie Moore and John Rymer kicked off today talking about Dynamic Business Applications and their first discussion was around brown paper bags. They made the point that brown paper bags are a pure commodity and all you can do is reduce costs. Other kinds of bags offer more opportunities for innovation and, thus, more margins. [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Innovation, News, SOA, web 2.0 |
20th
May
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
John Chambers, CEO of Cisco was talking about the next phase of the internet - collaboration. The market is in transition - social networking has changed personal communities and these technologies will also transform the future of work. Cisco’s approach is to focus on transitions - not competitors, but market transitions. In ‘97 they focused [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Innovation, web 2.0 |
29th
April
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Back on this blog for John Rymer of Forrester talking about dynamic business applications (about which I have blogged before) and how the next generation of systems will be designed for people and built for change. John began by showing a video of a broker’s desktop demonstration built by Adobe and some partners. Brokers are [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Process Management, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Decision Management, Innovation, Predictive Analytics, SOA |
24th
April
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
Jeff Jonas wrote an interesting post - Custom Software Scope Changes (Not) - that reminded me of my ongoing battle to argue that rules are not requirements. Jeff argues that we take far too little time designing custom software before we start to build it. A summary quote from his post illustrates his point:
I am [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Rules, Enterprise Applications |
22nd
February
2008
Posted by
James Taylor
I saw this post on Better Projects and it reminded me of days spent writing a RAD methodology for Ernst and Young. RAD, or Rapid Application Development, uses prototyping and lots of short iterations to keep a development project on track. The post has a nice graphic showing the cycles within cycles used in the [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Agility, Business Rules, Requirements |