2nd
December
2008
Tobin Gilman of Oracle presented on Oracle’s BI Strategy. Oracle views Enterprise Performance Management and Business Intelligence as coming together over time and has a single strategy. They see ERP and CRM as having enabling operational efficiencies by driving a process-centric view across silos. Clearly BPM has completed this transition. Yet management processes - reporting, [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Activity Monitoring, Business Intelligence, Customer Experience, Data Mining, Enterprise Applications, Predictive Analytics |
2nd
December
2008
Rachel Scales presented on Getting to the Right Price: Using BI Apps with Oracle Data Mining to Improve You Company’s Margins. Pricing is increasingly complex as the world is changing and becoming more competitive. Customer loyalties are changing, resources are constrained and competition is more global. Price management is necessary to ensure your share of [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Intelligence, Data Mining |
2nd
December
2008
Charlie Berger of Oracle presented on Powering Next-Generation Predictive Applications with Oracle Data Mining (ODM). Charlie joined Oracle from Thinking Machines about a decade ago and have been putting machine learning algorithms into the Oracle kernel. Data Mining, in database or otherwise, sifts through data to find hidden patterns, discover new insights and make predictions. [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Intelligence, Data Mining, Predictive Analytics |
2nd
December
2008
At the Business Intelligence Warehousing and Analytics Summit at Oracle today. BIWA is part of the Oracle User Group focused on BI, analytics and data warehousing. Jeanne Harris of Accenture (author, with Tom Davenport, of Competing on Analytics) started off the day. The subtitle of her presentation is “Building Competitive Strategies Around Data-driven Insights”.
Analytics are [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Data Mining, Predictive Analytics |
21st
November
2008
Jim Sinur brought up an interesting point today when he blogged IBM, Microsoft, Oracle and SAP have bought Business Rule Technology. What’s up with that? The big players seem to be toying with business rules - there’s plenty of activity but not much understanding or commitment.
SAP bought Yasu but until recently did not show much [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules |
30th
October
2008
Day 3 starts early - 8am for the first session. The Expo closed yesterday and today will be just content. Yesterday was an interesting day with lots of discussion among the attendees of the Oracle acquisition of Haley. Here are the blog posts I found for yesterday
2008 Business Rules Forum - Day 1
2008 Business [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Decision Management |
29th
October
2008
Well after SAP bought YASU and IBM bought ILOG everyone figured Oracle had to move and they did today, buying Haley. Interestingly the announcement seemed focused more on software for government agencies than on rules as part of Oracle’s platform so perhaps there is more to come regarding rules in Fusion.
Interesting times.
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posted by James Taylor in Business Rules |
28th
July
2008
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 |
23rd
May
2008
Mike Gilpin and Noel Yuhanna gave a presentation on how informaton-as-a-service can help your projects and applications. Many SOA implementations were focused on transactional solutions but Forrester found that many used the same service infrastructure to expose information - e.g. a customer update service which exposes the current address also. Theme: Information-as-a-service (IaaS) offers to [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Intelligence, Composite Applications, SOA, SaaS, Text Analytics |
23rd
May
2008
Ken Vollmer kicked off the last day of the event with a view from the field - a survey on BPM that Forrester did at the end of 2007. The theme is that “BPM has already achieved mainstream status inside of most enterprises but we still have a long way to go to achieve the [...]
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posted by James Taylor in Business Process Management, Financial Services, Supply Chain |