New visual rule builder (Michael Neale) I have been beaving away on a new UI/rule modeller specifically for the web (well, at least the web initially, hopefully we will also do it stand alone in the plug in soon).
The famous golfer riddle - first published (as far as I know) by rule-celebrity Dr. Ernest Friedmann-Hill (creator of the JESS rule engine) in this online-article.
Having just wrapped up the European Business Rules Conference (see my previous posts), I noticed that some misinformation was provided at EBRC around sequential and inferencing execution of business rules. Sadly the misinformation was provided by a vendor
Rules in (and for) the Web have become a mainstream topic since inference rules were marked up for E-Commerce and were identified as a Design Issue of the Semantic Web, and since transformation rules were put to practice for document generation from a cen
Drools is an enhanced Rules Engine implementation based on the ReteOO algorithm, an algorithm adapted from the one originally devised by Charles Forgy. Drools has become quite popular due to performance characteristics and it’s natural language semantic
One consistent question we get from outside the CEP market is: what is the difference between a “standard” Business Rules Engine (or BRE) and a (rule-driven) Complex Event Processing engine? This is particularly interesting because a rule-based CEP en
BI stands for Business Intelligence, which to some will sound suspiciously similar to Groucho’s famous comment. But in reality BI is more to do with providing the right “Business Information” to people who need it (i.e. business analysts), and there
New editors for Rule, Task, Decision, Definitions support a single screen editing interface with * Unlimited undo-redo support * Assisted typing and Intellisense * Complete keyboard support for building complex expressions * IDE like expression building,
This article gives a practical introduction into the language Xcerpt, guided by many examples for illustrating language constructs and usage. Xcerpt is a rule-based, declarative query and transformation language for XML data. In Xcerpt, queries and the (r