2008-12-18T18:53:00.011+02:00
Israel is a small country, and its commercial TV stations just recently discovered the "reality" programs, this week was the final episode of a reality program called "big brother" in which a bunch of people are closed in a house (the one seen in the picture) for 3.5 months (those who survive until the end) doing nothing, without any connection to the outside world, and with cameras everywhere, there was a dedicated TV channel watching them 24 hours, and twice a week - TV show in prime time. This reality program drove the entire country crazy -- got unprecedented rating, and became the main discussion issue among people, today I went to the coffee room to take some coffee and have seen around 10 people there spending their time in a heated discussion around this TV program. Interestingly, in the night of the final, a group of people from the culture and artist community made a big demonstration against the TV channels that spend their production money on realities, and drop drama series -- I personally agree with them.
BTW -- event processing can be used to serve as a "big brother" and trace people's activities, but I'll blog about it another time.
I would like to answer the question of Hans Glide about my previous posting -- the question has been -- in the illustration (below) it is seen that "complex events" is not a subset of "derived events" meaning that there are complex events that are not "derived events" - is it true?
The answer is: indeed - "complex events" intersects "derived event" but there are derived events which are not complex events and complex events which are not derived events.
The first case is easy: enriched event is a derived event but it is not a complex event.
What about the other direction ? - well, getting back to what "derived event" is -- this is an event that is created by some "event processing agent" as a result of some event processing function. If an event is a raw event it is not derived event. However, there are in the universe
"raw complex events", not all complex events are derived by software artifacts. For example: Since David Luckham is the copywriter of the term "complex event", I'll use two of his favorite examples:
Tsunami
Economic Crisis
(David referred to the one started in 1929, but our generation also won one of these)
The "economic crisis" is a complex event -- it is certainly an event, and it is aggregation of other events, but this aggregation is not created by software, the raw event is already complex; likewise the "tsunami".
More - later.
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