Paul Harmon, well known and respected market analyst, newsletter editor, consultant and author, and Celia Wolf, business strategy and marketing consultant, founded Business Process Trends to provide a primary source of news and information relating to all aspects of business process change, focused on trends, directions and best practices. The goals of Business Process Trends are to:
* Educate and Support the Market, including software and hardware vendors, consulting companies, users, standards organizations and other service providers.
* Communicate and Exchange Information about what users are doing, what technologies vendors are developing and delivering, what methodologies are working and what trends and standards are emerging.
* Coalesce and Cooperate through presentation of varying points of view and opposing perspectives on current trends and directions in a rich content environment.
* Standardize and Support Best Practices across all segments of the market engaged in Business Process
Oryx is a web-based BPMN editor. You can create BPMN models and share them with your business partners, clients and friends. You may not only share a model with your colleagues, but discuss and improve it within one working environment. Thus, Oryx brings all the advantages of Web 2.0 into the world of modeling. To start modeling you need zero installation–your model is just one click away. So, why not start modeling right now or check out existing models?
Das OKSIMO Projekt entwickelt einen Satz von Open Source Software Lösungen um tägliche Fragen und Aufgaben zu formalisieren, modellieren und simulieren.
Dienstleistungen
Das OKSIMO Team bietet auf Ihre Bedürfnisse zugeschittene Dienstleistungen. Erfahren Sie mehr über Unterstützung, Betreuungs- und Serviceoptionen für Ihr OKSIMO Projekt.
Model Library
Die Model Library ist eine durch das OKSIMO Team unterstützte Open Community um den freien Austausch von Wissens-Modellen für die OKSIMO Software Suite zu ermöglichen.
Projekt Informationen
Erfahren Sie mehr über das OKSIMO Projekt, aktuelle Entwicklungen, offene Fragen sowie unsere Benutzer- und Entwicklergemeinde.
Dynamic Networks Everything I described so far is common to CSP (Communicating Sequential Processes) and the Actor model. Here’s what makes actors more general: Connections between actors are dynamic. Unlike processes in CSP, actors may establish communication channels dynamically. They may pass messages containing references to actors (or mailboxes). They can then send messages to those actors. Here’s a Scala example: receive { case (name: String, actor: Actor) => actor ! lookup(name) } The original message is a tuple combining a string and an actor object. The receiver sends the result of lookup(name) to the actor it has just learned about. Thus a new communication channel between the receiver and the unknown actor can be established at runtime. (In Kilim the same is possible by passing mailboxes via messages.)
I. Szendro, J. López, и M. Rodr\'ıguez. Abstract Book of the XXIII IUPAP International Conference on Statistical Physics, Genova, Italy, (9-13 July 2007)