Hello here
October 2009Beau travail ! RT @mulkers: We're ready for Halloween... bit.ly
Today we visited the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. There we saw many elephants : bit.ly
This morning (Oct 28, 2009) I attended a iLog Business Rules Management System (BRMS) Demo and it gave me an idea. iLog has a great tool for testing rules. It allows to design test cases using MS Excell that are sent to the Rules Engine in order to determine if a rule set provides the expected decision. In the past I ave been involved with the difficult exercice of generating test data for Business Processes. Using the iLog testing tool, this could be realized like this : 1. Before the process is designed, use the BRMS to design the process vocabulary. 2. Create some basic rules which from process inputs produce process outputs. In fact these rules simulate the process. 3. Create the rules test cases such that the rule responds the right process output from a given process input. In fact the rules set must simulates the process for the foreseen test cases. 4. Communicate the rules and their test cases to the Process developpers so they can design and build the process using the test cases. 5. For automating the tests, at the end of the process (or at intervals if the process is composed of serveral parts), send the process inputs to the business rules and ask the rules engine to compare process results with the expected process results (this requires a comparison rule which allows to determine of two result sets are considered equivalent). To illustrate this, I used the opportunity to test gliffy to make a diagram: ![]() http://www.gliffy.com/publish/1872505/ Last twit was to test the del.icio.us / Twitter integration...
Testing Business Processes with iLog Business Rules (Illustrated with Gliffy) bit.ly
Discussion: The Enterprise Architecture Network | LinkedIn "Linking Information Systems to Business Performance" bit.ly
Had a nice lunch with an ex-colleague ;-)
I have installed Polaris....http
@Bleebot The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in having new eyes
It's autumn in Tombeek : bit.ly
Vlerick now 10th MBA School in the world ! bit.ly
I lauched a linked in group and I now see them all connecting with each other. Funny. ..
Just lost a long text I had written on an internal IBM blog... GRRR
@roulive Merci, je suis super impatient de voir ca... C'est direct ou faut attendre ?
@roulive J'en veux toujours bien une (cfr Direct Messages) :-)
@ddossot it's called "Turtles all the way down" : bit.ly
@ddossot and after : how to generate code on the fly which makes use of the on the fly generated global static values...
@Ulrichfr Pourquoi pas OpenERP ? bit.ly
I love this web site : The Big Picture. This time : Pictures of Saturn. bit.ly
LOL : First customer for Windows 7 looks exactly as you'd expect bit.ly
bX-59cppw : that's the error I get me when I try to see my blog bit.ly
A typical approach when thinking about Business Process Management is to try to draw two types of diagrams:
BPMN seems to be the way to go to manage a company's business process. So the question is : Is BPMN the panacea (a cure to all pains) for Business Process Management ? I dont think so. Here is why... If the BPMN approach sounds logical, it has nevertheless some drawbacks:
Middelware (other than BPEL Engines) allow businesses to manage their processes. Here are some examples:
So, If you are interested in BPM, I would recommend you the following : If you want to be closer to the business… When thinking about BPM Don’t think immediately BPMN, AS-IS and TO-BE Rather, think
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