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Business Process Execution Language (BPEL)

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Service-Oriented Architecture: SOA Strategy, Methodology, and Technology

April 30, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
Aggressively being adopted by organizations in all markets, service-oriented architecture (SOA) is a framework enabling business process improvement for gaining competitive advantage. Service-Oriented Architecture: SOA Strategy, Methodology, and Technology guides you through the challenges of deploying SOA. It demonstrates conclusively that strategy and methodology are the keys to implementing SOA and provides the methodology needed for SOA success.

The book examines the role of both non-agile and agile project management techniques for deploying SOA. Its methodology applies frameworks of governance, communications, product realization, project management, architecture, data management, service management, human resource management and post implementation processes. Filled with case studies, the book shows the methodology in action.

This reference benefits business managers, business analysts, and technology project managers who are serious about adopting SOA as a long-term strategy. It is also benefits those new to business process management, enterprise architecture, and information systems and need to understand SOA, its business drivers, and its methodology. 

Service-Oriented Architecture: SOA Strategy, Methodology, and Technology

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Advantage Service, Agile Project Management, Architecture, Business Analysts, Business Drivers, Business Process Improvement, Business Process Management, Communications Product, Enterprise Architecture, Gaining Competitive Advantage, Human Resource Management, Management Architecture, Management Enterprise, methodology, Product Realization, Project Management Techniques, Project Managers, Service Oriented Architecture, Service Oriented Architecture Soa, ServiceOriented, Strategy, Technology, Technology Product, Technology Project, Term Strategy

SOA Fundamentals

April 29, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
SOA Fundamentals is not a pure technology book, but covers a wide range of topics including- SOA Concepts and Principles- Web Service Protocols- SOA Technology Infrastructure- Service Architecture- Service Specification- SOA Project Management- SOA Governance- SOA Adoption- Business Architecture- Business Value from SOA. Audience: SOA Fundamentals is aimed at anyone who needs to understand the basics of SOA. That includes IT architects and developers, IT managers and IT specialists of all kinds, as well as business analysts and other business people working together with IT to deliver a service-based business.Purpose: As well as providing a basic understanding of SOA to any reader, this guide particularly supports students who are undertaking CBDI Forum certification in SOA Fundamentals as the certification questions are all based on the content of this guide.Published by http://www.cbdiforum.com

SOA Fundamentals

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Adoption, Architects, Audience, Business Analysts, Business Architecture, Business Purpose, Business Value, Certification Questions, Developers, Fundamentals, Governance, Infrastructure Service, Product Description, Project Management, Service Architecture, Service Management, Service Protocols, Technology Book, Technology Infrastructure, Web Service, Web Technology

BPMN Method and Style: A levels-based methodology for BPM process modeling and improvement using BPMN 2.0

April 27, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
Creating business process models that can be shared effectively across the business – and between business and IT – demands more than a digest of BPMN shapes and symbols. It requires a step-by-step methodology for going from a blank page to a complete process diagram. It also requires consistent application of a modeling style, so that the modeler’s meaning is clear from the diagram itself. Author Bruce Silver explains not only the meaning and proper usage of the entire BPMN 2.0 palette, but calls out the working subset that you really need to know. He also reveals the hidden assumptions of core concepts left unexplained in the spec, the key to BPMN’s deeper meaning.

The book addresses BPMN at three levels, with primary focus on the first two. Level 1, or descriptive BPMN, uses a basic working set of shapes and symbols to meet the needs of business users doing process mapping. Level 2, or analytical BPMN, is aimed at business analysts and architects. It takes advantage of BPMN’s expressiveness for detailing event and exception handling, key to analyzing and improving process performance and quality. Level 3, or executable BPMN, is brand new in BPMN 2.0. Here the XML underneath the diagram shapes becomes an executable design can be deployed to a process engine to automate the process. The method and style detailed in the book aligns these three levels, facilitating business-IT collaboration throughout the process lifecycle.

Inside the book you’ll find discussions, illustrated with over 100 examples, about:

The questions BPMN asks, and does not ask The meaning of basic concepts like starting and completing, sending and receiving, waiting and listening Subprocesses and hierarchical modeling style The five basic steps in creating Level 1 models Event and exception-handling patterns Branching and merging patterns Level 2 modeling method Elements of BPMN style: element usage and diagram composition

BPMN Method and Style: A levels-based methodology for BPM process modeling and improvement using BPMN 2.0

Filed Under: BPMN Books Tagged With: Author Bruce, Blank Page, BPMN, Bruce Silver, Business Analysts, Business Process, Business Users, Consistent Application, Core Concepts, Deeper Meaning, Exception Handling, Expressiveness, Hidden Assumptions, improvement, Level 1, Level 3, levelsbased, Lifecycle, Method, methodology, Modeling, Process, Process Mapping, Product Description, Quality Level, Step Methodology, Style, Style Element, using

MagicDraw UML 10.5 Extends Business Process Modeling with Export to BPEL

July 2, 2009 by BPELforum

No Magic, Inc.®, a leading vendor of architecture modeling software, today announced the release of MagicDraw® UML 10.5, an upgrade of No Magic’s award-winning UML-based architecture tool. MagicDraw 10.5 extends its business process modeling capabilities to export Business Process Execution Language (BPEL 1.1) compliant code from Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN) diagram. The new version delivers a brand new integration with ProActivity Business Process Analysis suite, updated NetBeans integration and improved GUI to increase flexibility and convenience using the tool.

 

No Magic continues its commitment to narrow the divide between business needs and the systems developed to meet those needs by extending a Business Process Modeling offering in its award-winning UML-based architecture tool. The new MagicDraw UML BPEL Export functionality allows the users to export their Business Process Execution Language (BPEL 1.1) compliant code from a Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN) diagram. The outputted BPEL code can be used in BEA WebLogic 8.1.

 

“By leveraging our experience gained implementing the best support of UML and other standards from Object Management Group (OMG) in MagicDraw, we move to provide our customers the most complete standards compliant solution in Business Process area,” said Richard Green, CEO of No Magic.

 

The new brand integration with ProActivity Business Process Analysis Suite eliminates the gap separating business analysts from application analysts and system designers. Now MagicDraw UML imports static and dynamic structure information from ProActivity business models for instant creation/redesign of IT systems.

 

In addition to the new business process modeling offerings, No Magic continues to enrich its UML modeling capabilities. This new version delivers GUI improvements that increase the convenience and flexibility of working with MagicDraw UML. To reflect the changes in NetBeans IDE 4.X No Magic has updated the seamless integration with NetBeans IDE. This update allows the most standard compliant UML tool on the market to be used by the users of the latest NetBeans version.

 

About No Magic

 

Founded in 1995, No Magic Inc. is headquartered in Allen, Texas with operations worldwide. In 1998 No Magic released MagicDraw UML version 1.0, the first large scale application completely developed in Java, earning Sun’s “100% Java Application” credential. The tool has won numerous awards from the world’s most prestigious developers’ journals. In addition to the continued development of MagicDraw, No Magic, Inc. also provides software development outsourcing, consulting, enterprise architecture, business process, training services from its software development facilities in Kaunas, Lithuania and Bangkok, Thailand.

 

Filed Under: BPEL News Tagged With: Bea Weblogic, Business Analysts, Business Models, Business Process Analysis, Business Process Execution Language, Business Process Modeling, Dynamic Structure, Export Functionality, Gap, Gui Improvements, Magic Inc, Magicdraw Uml, Modeling Software, New Business, Object Management Group, Offerings, Omg, System Designers, Uml Modeling, Uml Tool

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