Thursday, May 31, 2007
Groping for a BPM Definition
BPM is sometimes described as a business discipline or function that uses business practices, techniques and methods to create and improve business processes. Under this general definition, just about any process improvement discipline or activity, including ISO 9000, Total Quality Management, or Six Sigma methods might fit. BPM is also used to describe IT products that work with business quality approaches.
Tonight, Thursday, May 31, 2007, Arthur J. Hedge III is scheduled to speak to an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers function in New Jersey. Mr. Hedge is a member of the AIIM Document Management standards committee and spoke on BPM topics at this year's annual AIIM event in April.
His talk tonight is described as a description of the various software elements that together make up a BPM solution and open source versions of those software elements.
There are over 100 vendors that develop products in the BPM software market. Sometimes, these products are marketed as tools that allow organizations to design, automate, and manage the activities of knowledge workers from within one platform.
Mr. Hedge III will be throwin' it down old skool at the Morris County Library in Whippany, New Jersey tonight, just minutes away from Molly Malone's Irish-American Restaurant.
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Open Source and Business Process Management
His talk this week is described as a description of the various software elements that together make up a BPM solution and open source versions of those software elements.
Mr. Hedge III wrote this article a couple of years ago, which makes it relevant now, given the state of maturity in the BPM trend. He wrote, "Definitions vary as to what this software category encompasses ..." and that is still the case.
More recently, he published this article focused on "walking you through" the development of a business process diagram.
Thursday, May 24, 2007
"Teleworker" in my inbox today
Today's lead story says that a survey of more than 200 government managers from 45 defense and civilian agencies reveals that management resistance is a strong barrier to telework and highlights a perception that there is limited top-down support for telework.
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Conference in Boston
ONStor Inc. CEO Bob Miller is scheduled to make a presentation today at the annual JPMorgan Technology Conference in
ONStor claims its Network Attached Storage products reduce the cost of storage management by consolidating information from multiple Windows, UNIX and Linux devices into a single scalable file storage environment.
This article, published last year in Infoworld, notes that 5 exabytes (that’s 5 million terabytes) of new data were created and stored in 2002. Another study cited in that article predicts that the overall volume of data archived by government and corporations will grow to 27 exabytes by the year 2010. Some of those data will be stored in databases, but much of the new information will be unstructured data created in a variety of formats, including images, sound snippets, data series, and office documents. If Miller's products can reduce the cost of managing these electronic records, that's a story he should tell today. ONStor's Pantera Clustered NAS was selling for about half the cost of similar products from major vendors in this category when it went on sale last year.
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
Privacy vs. technology
Here's a link to an article published by the Government Technology Conference that should be of interest to electronic records management specialists.
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Dr. Galloway's presentation today at ARMA Austin
In the article she wrote linked in my post from this morning, Dr. Galloway wrote: "There are potentially many advantages to be gained by the implementation of TERM (Texas Email Repository Model)."
But I didn't get a chance to ask her what kind of follow-up had been done after her TERM design had been delivered to the State of Texas. She was trying to eat and I didn't think it would be polite to interrupt her to ask. There was a diagram from the TERM document included in her PowerPoint presentation today, but it was only referenced in passing.
RM celebrity spotted at today's meeting: David Gracy, recipient of the 2005 Katherine Drake Hart History Preservation Award for his contribution to the preservation of Austin and Travis County history.
Monthly Austin ARMA meeting
Prof. Galloway is an expert in digital archiving and the author of this article about access to and long-term preservation of digital records in state government settings, particularly email records.
Friday, May 11, 2007
Buying Mac?
Thursday, May 10, 2007
ERM, railroads, and metaphors
The ERM metaphor that occurs to us today, then, has the traditional archivists and records managers building their track in one direction, and the IT experts building the other way, with each side meeting in the middle and effectively linking their disciplines under the aegis of electronic records management!
To salute this historic anniversary (the train thing I mean), I will attend tonight's meeting of the Capital Area Mac Users group in Austin, Texas. Tonight's topics include Adobe Creative Suite 3. I have a dated Mac at home and plan to update it as soon as I can learn enough about them to select the right one to buy.
I'm confident that Adobe Creative Suite 3 uses the Extensible Metadata Platform (XMP) markup language. XMP defines a metadata model that can be used with any defined set of metadata items.
Wednesday, May 9, 2007
This post most of all!
Analytics is broadly defined as the science of logical analysis, or the branch of logic dealing with analysis. Thanks to a product called Google Analytics, bloggers often think specifically of that particular product when they read the word "analytics," but like the word "strategy," analytics is a word that many different users understand in various ways.
What, then, does the blog you are reading now have to do with logical analysis applied in the service of a long-term plan of action? The answer is hinted at in this phrase:
i will BLOG it until i BECOME it
Tuesday, May 8, 2007
Blogging about blogging
Blogging and community contributors will peak in the first half of 2007. Given the trend in the average life span of a blogger and the current growth rate of blogs, there are already more than 200 million ex-bloggers. Consequently, the peak number of bloggers will be around 100 million at some point in the first half of 2007.
I came across this while reading this AIIM blog.
Monday, May 7, 2007
Breaking news! which everybody knew last week
The IT planners at Travis County (where I work) seem to think that Novell is going to go out of business within a few years.
I've been told that Microsoft claims that Linux infringes upon Microsoft intellectual property; Novell says the deal being announced today is not an acknowledgment that Linux infringes upon any Microsoft intellectual property.
Click here to read the article in today's Boston Globe.
Friday, May 4, 2007
Happy 4 de Mayo
Thursday, May 3, 2007
Archiving blog content
Anyway, the subject of the article will fascinate bloggers who are interested in ERM and records managers who are interested in blogs. The very concept of blogs, these most ephemeral of electronic records, in the context of archiving and long-term preservation blows my mind!
Wednesday, May 2, 2007
Webmasters note this development
NotePage, Inc. of
RSSFilter is a PHP script that filters the contents of an RSS feed. The filters can be defined by the publisher so that the resulting RSS feed contains only the information they want. RSSFilter uses rules to filter the items that are included from a feed in the resulting feed.
PHP is a scripting language that can be embedded into HTML. Read more about it at this link.
In case you need a quick introduction to RSS, this post by the inimitable Jesse Wilkins links to an RSS basics video primer that Jesse liked.
Webmasters interested in electronic records management should note that RSSFilter supports Dublin Core namespace extensions.
