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Monday |
1:30 PM - 4:30 PM | Pre-Conference Tutorials Track
SESSION TITLE
Event Processing 2010: Past, Present and Future
SPEAKER(s):
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David Luckham
Emeritus Professor
Stanford University
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MAIN FOCUS OF PRESENTATION:
Business
FAMILIARITY WITH SUBJECT:
Some
ABOUT THIS SESSION:
This tutorial on Complex Event Processing (CEP) will cover six topics.
- Developing markets for event processing — a short survey of the growth of CEP in enterprise management applications and Business Activity Monitoring.
- History — Event processing 1950-2000.
- Adopting event processing — how to analyze your event processing requirements and plan a solution.
- A survey of basic CEP concepts and their applications.
- Crossing the Chasms — the four stages in the development of event processing from 2000 to 2050. The need to improve the CEP technology in commercial tools and applications.
- The age of ubiquitous CEP — event processing goes global and disappears under the hood. Scenarios of current and future applications.
What you will learn:
- What Complex Event Processing is
- How to apply CEP to solve business problems and improve your BI operations
- How CEP enhances Service Oriented Architectures, Business Process Management, and Business Rules systems
ABOUT THE SPEAKER(s):
David Luckham, Professor Emeritus, Stanford University – Author of “The Power of Events”, has held positions in mathematics, computer science and electrical engineering at eight major universities in Europe and the United States. He was one of the founders of Rational Software Inc. in 1981. He has been an invited lecturer and keynote speaker at many international conferences.
His research and consulting activities in business and software technology are aimed at building real-time event-driven enterprises. Topics include event-driven systems, complex event processing, business activity monitoring, enterprise middleware, multi-processing and business process languages, event-driven systems architecture modeling and simulation, and artificial intelligence (automated deduction and reasoning systems).
He has published four books and over 100 technical papers; he has received two ACM/IEEE Best Paper Awards and US Industry and Government awards. His latest book, “The Power of Events”, deals with the foundations of complex event processing in distributed enterprise systems.
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