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Exact Software--Working Diligently Towards the "One Exact" Synergy Part Five: Market Impact (Continued) ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Mar 2, 2004 Abstract : While most traditional enterprise resource planning (ERP) solutions are task-driven, by adding structure to processes that are typically handled inconsistently or manually, Macola ES is process-driven. A truly integrated workflow and business process management (BPM) tool allows users to achieve long coveted IT objectives--the paperless office, management by exception, and workflow as electronic framework to guide employees.
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Understanding SOA, Web Services, BPM, BPEL, and More Part One: SOA, Web Services, and BPM ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Dec 22, 2004 Abstract : In the larger schema of things, SOA would espouse general, more abstract concepts of software reusability and encapsulation within certain boundaries (as to then provide access to that software via defined interfaces), Web services would then make these SOA concepts vendor-independent due to their use of generally accepted standards, while BPM and BPEL would be some of the engines making the whole system work.
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Oracle Further Orchestrates Its SOA Forays Part Five: Collaxa Acquisition ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Mar 18, 2005 Abstract : With the acquisition of Collaxa, Oracle has quickly plugged a hole in its SOA/BPM message by providing new workflow capabilities and monitoring tools to report on the progress of business processes, and by providing runtime support for BPEL.
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BPM Weaves Data And Processes Together For Real-time Revenues ( Pages)
by David Cameron
May 30, 2003 Abstract : Linking data to process is the realm of business process management (BPM). BPM's focus on process dramatically reduces the amount of data that needs to be moved, and thereby reduces both the initial cost and ongoing maintenance cost of application integration.
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The Future of Business Process Management: Where is BPM heading? ( Pages)
by Hans Mercx
May 29, 2006 Abstract : The need for quick responses to changing business environments has resulted in the growth of business process management (BPM). Thus, BPM vendors are embarking on merger and acquisition strategies to meet the functional requirements of businesses.
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BPM Showdown! Oracle's Hyperion System 9 vs. OutlookSoft vs. Cartesis Suite ( Pages)
by Lyndsay Wise
May 30, 2007 Abstract : I'm Lyndsay Wise, senior research analyst at Technology Evaluation Centers. Welcome to another in TEC's series of enterprise software Showdowns. Today's Showdown pits three of the top business performance management (BPM) vendors against each other in a head-to-head contest: Hyperion System 9 vs. OutlookSoft vs. Cartesis Suite! We hope you find this Showdown helpful and informative, and invite your comments and questions.
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The Future of Business Process Management Where is BPM heading? (4 Pages)
by Hans Mercx
Oct 20, 2005 Abstract : The need for quick responses to changing business environments has resulted in the growth of business process management (BPM). Vendors are embarking on merger and acquisition strategies to meet the functional requirements of businesses.
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Impressive Enterprise Resource Planning Solution Gets A Little Help From Its Friends ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Jul 27, 2006 Abstract : Despite impressive product depth and breadth (for instance, customer relationship management [CRM], workflow, traceability, and quality management are provided natively), Strategic Systems International (SSI) has longstanding partnerships with several best-of-breed specialists.
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J.D. Edwards Chooses Freedom to Choose EAI ( Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Jul 27, 2000 Abstract : J.D. Edwards announced a new corporate vision that extends its ‘idea-to-action’ to inter-enterprise collaboration expressed in the phrase ‘freedom to choose’. In other words, take the best of ERP, CRM, eBusiness, and business intelligence components, plumb it with possibly the best of EAI and the workflow integration components and create something called collaborative commerce ‘best-of-breed’ mishmash.
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