I should have known that disputing Michael Rowley’s contention that mapping BPMN to BPEL was “simpler” than a straight BPMN 2.0 solution would invite a further response. Two, actually, one from Michael and another from Frank Leymann. Hmmm. In a room with those two, I’m at best the third smartest guy. But unlike the “stacker-bashing” [...]
Continue reading about BPMN vs BPEL: The Debate Goes On (Sigh)
Active Endpoints’ Alex Neihaus points me to a post by his CTO Michael Rowley entitled “Which is simpler: BPMN or BPEL?” I’m groaning before I even read it, because I know where Michael is headed. Right off a cliff, in my view.
Their product ActiveVOS is one of the first to support BPMN 2.0 diagrams, but [...]
Continue reading about BPMN vs BPEL: Are We Still Debating This?
Lombardi’s Teamworks 7 adds a wealth of features tosupport massive reuse of process artifacts across multiple projects in various stages of development and maintenance. My latest BPMS Report takes a close look at Lombardi’s brand new offering.
Two weeks ago Appian launched version 6 of its BPMS, along with a rebooted online collaboration network called Appian FORUM and a suite of professional services offerings. Appian plays in the human-centric business-empowered end of the BPMS vendor landscape along with Lombardi and Savvion. With all the vendors now claiming ease of use, Appian’s new [...]
I just finished a white paper on case management for Global 360, whose Case360 product comes the closest to my own view of what case management is all about. Click here to download the report. If you are interested in that topic, you might want to subscribe to my BPMN Case Management site, www.bpmncase.com.
Well, sort of… By that I mean you can export a BPMN diagram from your Blueprint account to your desktop and import it into another BPMN tool, like Process Modeler for Visio, the tool I use in my BPMessentials training, or BizAGI (see screenshot).
After months of my nagging Lombardi about the need for this, it popped [...]
I finally shipped the book off to the printer yesterday! Wow, why does the last 5% take 50% of the time? Not certain how long before it ships, but June almost for sure.
I’ve been using the new levels-based method and style approach in private classroom training for the past couple months. I think it makes [...]
Continue reading about BPMN Method and Style – 2-Day Class in San Francisco
Keith Swenson has a nice post on the representation of human choice in BPMN. He objects to the use of a gateway to represent a human decision at the end of a task, like clicking either Approve or Reject. Instead he proposes a new boundary event for this purpose (he suggests the None boundary event, currently [...]


Recent Comments