European Business Rules Conference -- Day 2

 
Net: Another dose of concrete data and experience at a well-run conference.
 
Memes: Office is the most widely used business rules tool (if not the best), complex business policies drive adoption (e.g., government compliance).
 
Michael Azoff (Butler Group), Realising the Potential of Business Rules Automation: Covered a wide range of trends, alternating between laudable goals and candidate feature lists. He repeated a now-oft citation to eBay's adoption of rules.
 
Tom Debevoise (Business Knowledge Architects), Open-Source Business Rules: A Cast Study: Covered three Java-centric open-source rules efforts: OpenRules, Drools (now JBoss Rules), and his own OpenLexicon. On one hand, OpenRules has an Excel front-end, making it the most approachable of the three for a business user, and on the other, JBoss Rules is the most powerful engine, perhaps most appealing to a developer. Bonus: Tom autographed free copies of his book Business Process Management With a Business Rules Approach!
 
Caspar Fall (ELCA), Applying an Open-Source Business Rules Engine to Validate Questionnaire Responses: Hearing that customers want flexibility, system integrator authored some 50 rules in Visio (!) using NxBre on .NET to validate annual census data required by the Swiss federal government for some 2,300 health-care institutions.
 
Ronnie Keiser (SD Worx), Integration of Business Rules - A Case Study: To calculate salaries for some 600,000 Belgian employees, system integrator built their own rules engine (5 man years): existing engines don't focus on implementing legislation, by definition, rules are active during specific windows in history, and they want to target field experts. The result integrates with Word doing integrated calculation on forms, and with Outlook filing incoming calculation requests and replying with PDF reports.
 
Qusai Sarraf (Ivis Group), Business Rules in the Real World - The Tesco.com Story: The largest online retailer uses rules technology, but apparently of a fairly different sort than other applications because rules map unstructured into structured data (for example), allowing so-called 'semantic search'.
 

Posted Jun 14 2006, 06:25 PM by jeffrey-schlimmer

Comments

Caspar Fall wrote re: European Business Rules Conference -- Day 2
on 12-07-2006 4:46 AM
Nice to see I'm quoted here, thanks! If you have time to correct the spelling of my first name... and the URL of the company I work for is http://www.elca.ch ... Voilà! Best regards,

Caspar
Jeffrey Schlimmer wrote re: European Business Rules Conference -- Day 2
on 12-07-2006 8:37 AM
Done!

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