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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Complex Event Processing RSS News CEP is Not BPM, BAM, BRE, BRMS or SOA Post 302229614 by Linux Bot on Wednesday 27th of August 2008 10:10:03 AM
Old 08-27-2008
CEP is Not BPM, BAM, BRE, BRMS or SOA

Tim Bass
08-27-2008 06:37 AM
A post in *Technology content of current CEP products?*reminds me of why I rarely, if ever, agree with anything that comes out of Aleri’s marketing team.** To fair to Jeff, it is not only Aleri but others, who continually misdefine business process management (BPM) as CEP.

Jeff uses*the example, “Smart Order Routing” as an example of taking an event and routing the resulting market order match based on some simple rules.*** Routing a order kicked off by a simple order match against a deep liquidity pool (or other market factor) does not define*complex event processing nor*detecting a complex event -*the core idea behind CEP.** Order routing based on simple rules is BPM, plain and simple.

Let’s take another example, fraud.* In this example, there is some complex neural network monitoring for credit card fraud and a potential fraud is detected - this is CEP, detecting a complex event based on some sophisticated analytics.***

After a possible fraud has been detected, a process looks into a database and the routes the incident to someone in the company who is a (1) specialist in credit card fraud, (2) working at the same time of the discovered threat, and (3) immediately available*to act on this*type of task.** Routing the incident is not CEP, it is BPM.

Jeff makes the argument that it is OK to call*an event-driven*BPM task CEP because “it fits the EPTS definition” in the CEP glossary.** He also avoids the discussion of detection accuracy, and instead insists that latency is a*”very important” factor in a CEP application.

If you read the various post by vendors in the blog-o-sphere, it is obvious that they are*continually defining*CEP as BAM, BPM, BRE, BRMS, SOA and just about every other related processing activity that is complimentary to*the event correlation and analysis required to detect*an opportunity or threat to your business.

I’m not picking on Aleri.* TIBCO has been doing the same thing recently in their CEP blog, continually attempting to redefine CEP as BRMS.*** Detecting business opportunities and threats with high confidence requires sophisticated analytics, and their tools have not yet evolved to “real CEP” capabilities.* Instead,*vendors are attempting to redefine BPM, BRMS, BRE, and even SOA*to some degree, as CEP.*

CEP is Not BPM, BAM, BRE, BRMS or SOA.



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httppower(8)							     powerman							      httppower(8)

NAME
httppower - communicate with HTTP based power distribution units SYNOPSIS
httppower [--url URL] DESCRIPTION
httppower is a helper program for powerman which enables it to communicate with HTTP based power distribution units. It is run interac- tively by the powerman daemon. OPTIONS
-u, --url URL Set the base URL. INTERACTIVE COMMANDS
The following commands are accepted at the httppower> prompt: auth user:pass Authenticate to the base URL with specified user and password, using ``basic'' HTTP authentication which sends the user and password over the network in plain text. seturl URL Set the base URL. Overrides the command line option. get [URL-suffix] Send an HTTP GET to the base URL with the optional URL-suffix appended. post [URL-suffix] key=val[&key=val]... Send an HTTP POST to the base URL with the optional URL-suffix appended, and key-value pairs as argument. FILES
/usr/sbin/httppower /etc/powerman/powerman.conf ORIGIN
PowerMan was originally developed by Andrew Uselton on LLNL's Linux clusters. This software is open source and distributed under the terms of the GNU GPL. SEE ALSO
powerman(1), powermand(8), httppower(8), plmpower(8), vpcd(8), powerman.conf(5), powerman.dev(5), powerman-devices(7). http://sourceforge.net/projects/powerman powerman-2.3.5 2009-02-09 httppower(8)
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