WORKFLOW HANDBOOK 2004
Ouvrage 9780970350961 : WORKFLOW HANDBOOK 2004
Table of Contents
Foreword
Jon Pyke, Chair WfMC and Strategic Advisor to Staffware Plc., United
Kingdom
Introduction
Layna Fischer, General Manager Workflow Management Coalition, United
States
Download document containing short descriptions of each chapter. Five
pages in PDF format
SECTION 1_THE WORLD OF WORKFLOW
The Split Personality of BPM
Derek Miers, Enix Consulting, United Kingdom
Metrics Based Business Process Management
Tommy Hansen, Mike Marin and Khoi Dang, FileNet, United States
Web Services Orchestration and Management Through Intelligent BPM
Setrag Khoshafian, Ph.D., Pegasystems Inc., USA
Workflow-based Business Monitoring
Stefan Junginger, BOC Information Technologies Consulting GmbH, Germany;
Harald Kühn and Franz Bayer, BOC Information Systems GmbH, Austria;
Dimitris Karagiannis, University of Vienna, Austria
Workflow Implementation of Change Lifecycle for Product Configuration
Management
P Jiang, J Newman, Q Mair, E Valfre, J-F Calm, C Wiles, G Segarra, I
Viglietti, F Feru, T Visnovec & K Causse
Adaptive Process Management
Eric Y. Shan, University of California, Berkeley, California; Fabio
Casati and Ming-Chien Shan, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, Palo Alto,
California
Scorecard-based Process Controlling Linking Business Objectives to
Workflow Execution
Joerg Becker, Tobias Rieke; University of Muenster, Germany
Workflow and Business Process Outsourcing: Friend or Foe?
Narinder Singh, webMethods Workflow, United States
Workflow Management Middleware for Secure Distance-Spanning
Collaborative Engineering
Tim Schattkowsky, Wolfgang Mueller, Adam Pawlak; C-LAB, Paderborn,
Germany; Silesian University of Technology, Gliwice, Poland
Optimizing Rehabilitation Patient Scheduling Using Process-Simulation
Varun Panchapakesan, CACI, Inc., United States
Collaboration-enabled Process Management (CPM)
Martin Ader, W&GS, France
Spotlight on the Pacific Rim
Asia-Pacific: The Next Frontier for BPM
Linus Chow, Regional Director, HandySoft Global Corp., Asia-Pacific; Ken
Loke, Director, Bizmann Systems, SE Asia; Suraj Goyal, Deputy GM,
Datamatics Technologies, India.
Workflow in Japan: When Tradition Meets Technology
Dr. Geoffrey Long, KAISHA-Tec, Japan
Cooperative Fragment-driven Workflow Modeling Methodology and System
Kwang-Hoon Kim, Dong-Keun Oh, Jung-Hoon Lee, Jae-Kang Won, Hyong-Mok
Kim; Kyonggi University, South Korea
An Intelligent and Personalized Enterprise Process Portal
Chi-Tsai Yang and Bin-Shiang Liang; Flowring Technology, Taiwan;
Shung-Bin Yan and Feng-Jian Wang: Computer Science and Information
Engineering National Chiaotung University, Taiwan
SECTION 2_WORKFLOW STANDARDS
ASAP/Wf-XML 2.0 Cookbook
Keith D Swenson, Fujitsu Software Corporation, United States
This paper is for those who have a process engine of some sort, and wish
to implement a Wf-XML interface. At first, this may seem like a daunting
task because the specifications are thick and formal. But, as you will
see, the basic capability can be implemented quickly and easily. This
paper will take you through the basics of what you need to know in order
to quickly set up a foundation and demonstrate the most essential
functions. The rest of the functionality can rest on this foundation.
The approach is to do a small part of the implementation in order to
understand how your particular process engine will fit with the
protocol.
Creating Process Efficiencies by Combining BPM and BPO
Bob Puccinelli, DST Technologies, Inc., United States
Workflow Service Provider with XPDL
Arnaud Bezancon, ADVANTYS, France
Process Modeling Notations and Workflow Patterns
Dr. Stephen White, IBM Corp., United States
The Workflow Reference Model: 10 Years On (570kb PDF)
David Hollingsworth, Fujitsu Services, United Kingdom; Chair, Technical
Committee, WfMC.
Last year saw the 10th anniversary of the Workflow Reference Model. This
short paper reassesses the relevance of the Model in the current context
of Business Process Management. It discusses the principles behind the
Model, its strengths and weakness and examines how it remains relevant
to the industry today. It concludes by introducing a number of
considerations required to establish a "BPM Reference Model" and
discusses how the various overlapping standards in this space may be
categorised.
SECTION 3_DIRECTORIES AND APPENDICES
WfMC Structure and Membership Information
Appendix_Author Biographies
Appendix_Membership Directory
Appendix-Officers and Fellows
Index
Other Resources
Auteur : FISCHER
Editeur : FUTURE STRATEGY
Nombre de pages : 420
Date de publication : 02 2001
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