Event processing for business organizing the real time strategy enterprise

"Find out how Events Processing (EP) works and how it can work for you. Business Event Processing: An Introduction and Strategy Guide thoroughly describes what EP is, how to use it, and how it relates to other popular information technology architectures such as Service Oriented Architecture.Ex...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Luckham, David C. (-)
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Hoboken, N.J. : Wiley c2012.
Edición:1st edition
Materias:
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009628003406719
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Event Processing for Business: Organizing the Real-Time Enterprise; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1: Event Processing and the Survival of the Modern Enterprise; Four Basic Questions about Events; What Are Events and Which Ones Are Important?; Why Invest in Event Processing?; Know How Well You're Doing; Use All Event Sources; Detect When What You Need to Know Happens; Event Processing in Use; The Human Element and Other Sources of Errors; Extract What You Want to Know; Getting Started; Chapter 2: Sixty Years of Event Processing; Event Driven Simulation; Networks; Active Databases
  • MiddlewareThe Enterprise Service Bus; Chaos in the Marketing of Information Systems; Service Oriented Architecture; Event Driven Architecture; Summary: Event Processing, 1950-2010; Chapter 3: First Concepts in Event Processing; New Technology Begets New Problems; What Is an Event?; Event Clouds; Levels of Events and Event Analysis; Remark on Standards for Business Events; Event Streams; Processing the Event Cloud; Complex Event Processing and Systems That Use It; Discussion: Immutability of Events; Summary; Chapter 4: The Rise of Commercial Event Processing
  • The Dawn of Complex Event Processing (CEP)Four Stages of CEP; Simple CEP (1999-2007); CEP versus Custom Coding; Creeping CEP ( 2004- 2012); Business Activity Monitoring; Awareness and Education in Event Processing; Languages for Event Processing; Dashboards and Human-Computer Interfaces; Human-Computer Interfaces; CEP Becomes a Recognized Information Technology (2009-2020); Event Processing Standards; Ubiquitous CEP; Chapter 5: Markets and Emerging Markets for CEP; Market Areas; Financial Systems, Operations, and Services; Fraud Detection; Transportation; Security and Command and Control
  • Command and Control for SecurityHealth Care; Energy; Summary; Chapter 6: Patterns of Events; Events and Event Objects; Overloading Two Meanings; Patterns and Pattern Matching; Single Event Patterns; Processing Patterns by Machine; Patterns of Multiple Events Using Operators; Event Patterns and State; Event Patterns and Time; Causality between Events; Repetitive and Unbounded Behavior; Requirements for an Event Pattern Language; Correctness and Other Questions; Chapter 7: Making Sense of Chaos in Real Time: Part 1; Event Type Spaces; Restricting the Types of Event Inputs May Not Be an Option
  • The Expanding Input Principle: Always Plan for New Types of Event Inputs and Event OutputsArchitecting Event Processing Strategies; Gross Filters; Prioritization: Split Streaming, Topics, Sentiments, and Other Attributes; Complex Filtering and Prioritization Using Event Patterns; Summary; Chapter 8: Making Sense of Chaos in Real Time: Part 2; Abstract Events and Views; Levels of Abstraction and Views; Organizing Views; Computing Abstractions by Event Pattern Maps; Computable Event Hierarchies; Flexibility of Hierarchy Definitions; Drill Down and Event Analysis
  • Summary: Dealing with Information Overload