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International Journal of Electronic Business, 2006
The aim of e-business applications is to make businesses agile by supporting dynamic internal and external boundary-crossing business processes. This study defines a three-level architecture for developing e-business. The architecture includes (L1) business processes as front-end components; (L2) a business interactions manager (BIM) as a middle ...
Youcef Baghdadi
exaly +2 more sources
The aim of e-business applications is to make businesses agile by supporting dynamic internal and external boundary-crossing business processes. This study defines a three-level architecture for developing e-business. The architecture includes (L1) business processes as front-end components; (L2) a business interactions manager (BIM) as a middle ...
Youcef Baghdadi
exaly +2 more sources
Business Information System Architecture
Business information system architecture is a field positioned between the fields of enterprise architecture and software architecture. Enterprise architecture typically takes the more business-oriented point of view, where designing the structure of information systems is a final or implicit step.
Grefen, Paul W.P.J.; id_orcid
core +3 more sources
An architecture for a business and information system
IBM Systems Journal, 1988The transaction-processing environment in which companies maintain their operational databases was the original target for computerization and is now well understood. On the other hand, access to company information on a large scale by an end user for reporting and data analysis is relatively new.
Barry A. Devlin, Paul T. Murphy
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Information Architectural Design in Business Process Reengineering
Journal of Information Technology, 1996Business process reengineering and information architecture share a common strategic and business process focus. Both can be mutually supportive of each other's objectives. Information architecture design can produce a stable IA capable of supporting existing as well as improved business processes. Reciprocally, business process redesign (BPR) provides
William J. Kettinger +2 more
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Using Business Goals to Inform a Software Architecture
2010 18th IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference, 2010Requirements specifications seldom allow software and system architects to understand the business goals for a system. Architects need that information in order to design an appropriate architecture for the problem at hand. In this paper, we present a lightweight method based on goal oriented requirements engineering that begins with a canonical list ...
Paul C. Clements, Len Bass
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Business process redesign an information architecture
ACM SIGMIS Database: the DATABASE for Advances in Information Systems, 1995Business process redesign (BPR) and information architecture (IA) have been recognized as high priority agenda items in organizations during the 1990s. This paper explores the relationships between the two concepts. Specifically, this paper focuses on three main concerns: how IA supports BPR, how the lack of IA hinders BPR, and what approach to IA can ...
James T. C. Teng, William J. Kettinger
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An Open Architecture for QoS Information in Business Grids
2007Grid Computing is now in the state of development that can offer dynamic management of various parameters that affect the applications’ properties such as performance and reliability capabilities. The importance of that achievement is great, given the trend of migrating traditional service markets to inter-enterprise infrastructures and the resulting ...
KONSTANTINOS TSERPES +5 more
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An Architectural Pattern to Implement Business Rules in Information Systems
2015 IEEE 17th Conference on Business Informatics, 2015The use of business rules technologies to develop information systems has been advocated as a good strategy to provide more flexibility and keeping systems up to date. However, designing an architecture that allows systems to be rapidly adapted as business rules change over time remains a challenging activity. Based on the publish-subscribe pattern, we
Jandisson S. de Jesus, Ana C. V. de Melo
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