Before you get too excited this is not about some of the members of
this Group using Extra-Sensory Perception to endow an ESB with
predictive qualities:

<<The Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) has become the de facto integration
fabric for modern service-oriented architectures (SOAs). By connecting
and mediating services, ESBs help create streams of events that have
significant business value. To take full advantage of these new
streams of data, a new class of software called event stream
processing, or ESP, provides the ability to monitor and analyze events
as they flow through an ESB, identify patterns among them, and invoke
appropriate actions instantly – at the instant threat or opportunity
is detected. ESP enables an event-driven SOA to decipher event
patterns (if A is followed by B and then by C), with temporal (within
4 seconds) or spatial (within 10 feet) constraints among events as
they flow through the ESB. And more importantly, with ESP you can
react to these patterns instantly. Some think of ESP as an "enterprise
monitor" that allows a business to continuously analyze business
conditions in real-time, identify threat and opportunity, and act in
real-time.

ESP makes ESB services more intelligent, and is the next step in the
evolution of the ESB revolution.

ESP and ESB at Work in Baggage Handling

An example of how the ESP and ESB can work together is in the
transportation industry, where flight operations for airlines have
become increasingly more automated. Naturally, airlines operations are
among the most distributed systems in the world, and many airlines and
airport authorities are adopting ESBs as their integration backbone.
ESP is used by these systems to gain end-to-end visibility into this
distributed environment for real-time detection and correction of
problems.

An example of a critical real-time event processing application is
baggage handling. The average trip for a passenger's bag is much more
complicated than the journey of the passenger. Before your bag is
loaded onto your plane it is handled between 8 and 15 times in most
major airports, with much of the handling manual and, as a result,
error prone. Most airlines won't know a bag has been mishandled until
the passenger reports it as lost. Each mishandled bag costs an airline
an average of $150. With the largest airlines in the world handling
10's of millions of bags a year, better baggage handling could means
savings of 10's of millions of dollars for one airline alone.>>

You can read this at:

http://www.ebizq.net/hot_topics/esb/features/6665.html

Gervas








 
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