Business Process Technology [recurso electrónico] : A Unified View on Business Processes, Workflows and Enterprise Applications / by Dirk Draheim.
Tipo de material: TextoEditor: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010Descripción: XVII, 306p. 122 illus. online resourceTipo de contenido: text Tipo de medio: computer Tipo de portador: online resourceISBN: 9783642015885Tema(s): Computer science | Data transmission systems | Computer Communication Networks | Software engineering | Multimedia systems | Computer Science | Multimedia Information Systems | Input/Output and Data Communications | Computer Communication Networks | Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems | Programming Techniques | Programming Languages, Compilers, InterpretersFormatos físicos adicionales: Printed edition:: Sin títuloClasificación CDD: 006.7 Clasificación LoC:QA76.575Recursos en línea: Libro electrónicoTipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura | Copia número | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras |
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Libro Electrónico | Biblioteca Electrónica | Colección de Libros Electrónicos | QA76.575 (Browse shelf(Abre debajo)) | 1 | No para préstamo | 373393-2001 |
Business Process Excellence -- Research Opportunities in Business Process Technology -- Semantics of Business Process Models -- Decomposing Business Processes -- Structured Business Process Specification -- Workflow Technology and Human-Computer Interaction -- Service-Oriented Architecture -- Conclusion.
Currently, we see a lot of tools and techniques for specifying and implementing business processes. The problem is that there are still gaps and tensions between the different disciplines needed to improve business process execution and improvement in enterprises. Business process modeling, workflow execution and application programming are examples of disciplines that are hosted by different communities and emerged separately from each other. In particular, at the system analysis level concepts are not yet fully elaborated. Therefore, practitioners are faced again and again with similar questions in concrete business process projects: which decomposition mechanism to use? Who to find the correct granularity for business process activities? Which implementing technology is the optimal one in a given situation? This book approaches a systematization of the field. The method of the book is explicitly not a comparative analysis of existing tools and techniques – albeit the review of existing tools is a most important source for the considerations in the book. Rather, the book tries to provide a landscape of rationales and concepts in business processes with a discussion of alternatives.
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