To: The United States Government
We, the undersigned, are voters involved in the IT industry who
believe that software patents will stifle innovation in the software
industry and restrict computer users unfairly.- goto
originally Posted to cep.weblogger.com by David Soul on 2/8/04; 6:01:54 PM
in the IP section
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Tags: CEP, intellectual property
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U.S. Patent No. 5,838,906 was assigned by
the University of California to Chicago based Eolas Technology in
return for a protion of any royalties Eolas managed to raise. last
year, when the initial success of Eolas in a court case against
Microsoft was announced, it seemed to have hit the software quite hard
in the pocket book and made thier life difficult. The action was
hearaded by many at the time as great stuff… but not so fast … as
now some of the ramifications are coming to light. In a sory in Los Angeles Times (02/05/04) by Michael Hiltzik its revealed that:
Tags: CEP, intellectual property
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BAM goes XML
In this article (June 2004) in Application Development Trends by Rich
Seeley the claim is made that Business Activity Monitoring (BAM) and
Business Process Monitoring (BPM) both need XML, according to Anant
Jhingran, IBM’s director of business intelligence.
– goto
originally Posted to cep.weblogger.com by David Soul on 2/6/05; 3:43:05 PM
in the Standards section.
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“Just what is happening in the business process management (BPM) software
standards arena? Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL4WS)
— backed by IBM, Microsoft and BEA — has been battling the Business Process
Modeling Language (BPML), proposed by BPMI.org, for supremacy ….”
1/1/2004 By Richard Adhikari(This article originally appeared in the January 2004 issue of Application DevelopmentTrends) –
goto
originally Posted to cep.weblogger.com by David Soul on 2/6/05; 3:31:29 PM
in the Standards section.
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Tags: BPM, CEP, Complex Event Processing, model
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The
Web Services Interoperability organization (WS-I) announces a program
for companies that although support the WS-I’s work, they don’t have
the resources to join.
About WS-I:
WS-I is an open industry organization committed to promoting
consistent and reliable interoperability among Web services across
platforms, applications and programming languages. The organization
unites a diverse community of Web services companies to provide
guidance, recommended practices and supporting resources for developing
interoperable Web services. For more information, please visit www.ws-i.org.
– goto
originally Posted to cep.weblogger.com by David Soul on 1/1/05; 5:58:25 PM
in the Standards section.
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WS-I announces launch of Advocates Program
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There’s a lot of interest in Web services and the processes to create them.
The whole field Web Services appears to be in
a state of churn as there appears to be a quagmire of standards
developed
to solve barriers like interoperability, security and
manageability. It appears that there are more than 30 standards
in the area, many of them overlapping or contradictory.
In this interview (in internetnews.com) Clint Boulton asks Tom Glover
(who wears two Web services hats: senior program manager, Web services
standards for IBM; and IBM director, president, and chairman of the
board within the Web Services-Interoperability (WS-I) Organization) about the harried state of Web Services– goto
This is a preview of
Q&A: Tom Glover, IBM and WS-I Web Services Exec
.
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“Web Services Event Standards Take Big Step Forward” claims the title
of this Gartner document (Note Number: FT-22-0670) by Roy W. Schulte & Massimo Pezzini but then comes the description:
“Web services have lacked a standard
for event notification. Now, two proposals for just such a standard
have emerged within the space of two weeks. But unless the two vendor
camps get together, users won’t benefit much.”
So which is it? You’ll have to read the note to get Gartner’s take … – goto
originally Posted to cep.weblogger.com by David Soul on 2/16/04; 11:00:32 PM
in the Standards section.
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WS-Notification or WS-Eventing to be or not to be?
.
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SAN
FRANCISCO — IBM and several other vendors on Tuesday unveiled three
specifications intended to converge Web services and grid computing.
This is a preview of
IBM proposes convergence of Web services, grid computing
.
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To get key accident data, 30 million cars now record drivers' behavior.
“It
was only a matter of time. For several years, electronic devices in
cars have monitored acceleration and braking to save fuel and improve
safety. Now, they're saving some of that data to give automakers and
police a better idea of how you drive.” …..
“This is another example of where technology has outstripped the law and certain assumptions of how the world works,”
says Jay Stanley, director of communications for the Technology and
Liberty Project at the American Civil Liberties Union in New York.” ….
Tags: CEP, Privacy, science
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David
Appell comments on potential hazards when “special circumstances manage
to drill their way into every reasonable policy..” his case in point
…. Yahoo under attack by the parents of a Marine (killed in Iraq) who
want to read his email.
– goto
originally Posted to cep.weblogger.com by David Soul on 12/26/04; 9:00:43 PM
in the Privacy section.
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