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Object Management Group

CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture) was designed by the Object Management Group (OMG) to support open distributed communication between objects across a wide variety of platforms and languages. Interestingly, despite the Object in its name, CORBA does not directly expose the notion of object identity it could more properly be considered a distributed component framework. [Pg.426]

The answers to these questions are common across any set of components that can work together (see Section 10.2.2, Components and Standardization). Together, they form a set of definitions and rules called a component architecture. Microsoft s DCOM, the Object Management Group s CORBA, and Sun s JavaBeans are examples. Project teams often devise their own component architecture either independently or (more sensibly) as specializations of these types. Highly generalized architectures cannot provide, for example, a common model of a Bank Customer, but this would be a sensible extension within a bank. [Pg.434]

Object Management Group (OMG) Business process modeling notation (BPMN) final adopted specification (2002), http //www.bpmn.org/ Documants/OMGFinalAdoptedBPMNl-0Spec06-02-01.pdf... [Pg.838]

Object Management Group (OMG) Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) Core Specification, Version 3.0.3 (2004), http //www.omg.org/technology/documents/formal/corba iiop.htm... [Pg.838]

This is a very difficult issue. Many people are even desperate about it. First, we cannot start a new world from scratch. We have to live with the imperfect databases of today and manage their cleanup as best possible. Simultaneously we have to cope with their dramatic growth. Second, the problem involves an issue of standardization. Nomenclature is inconsistent in basically all parts of the field. The same protein has numerous different names, for instance. Even worse, sometimes different proteins share the same name. Standardization issues involve multinational cooperation and very firm management. The Object Management Group (OMG) has created a... [Pg.614]

The Object Management Group, a consortium of object technology vendors founded in 1989, created a technology specification named CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture). CORBA employs an abstraction similar to that of RPC, with a slight modification that simplifies programming and maintenance and increases extensibility of products. [Pg.720]

Object Management Group (OMG) (1995), Object Management Architecture Guide, Revision 3.0, OMG, Framingham, MA. [Pg.1789]

Object Management Group, Business Process Model and Notation 2.0. URL http //www.omg.Org/spec/BPMN/2.0/ (accessed January 31st, 2013). [Pg.156]

Considering that the objective of this research is to model a new business process and that it is desired to work with a graphical representation, an analysis of the different options reveal that the better choice is using UML language which is a standard maintained by the OMG (Object Management Group). [Pg.502]

OMG (a). Object Management Group http //www.bpmi.org/. Consulted March 20th 2009. [Pg.506]

Product Data Management Enablers vl.3. Object Management Group, Novembta- 2000. Available at http //www.omg.org/spec/PDME... [Pg.164]

Object Management Group, OMG Unified Modehng Language (OMG UML), Superstructure, Version 2.1.2, OMG Available Specification without Change Bars, fonnal/2007-02-05 (November 2007)... [Pg.32]

OMG Unified Modelling Language Superstructure. Object Management Group (July 2005) Version 2.0, formal/05-07-04... [Pg.49]

Object Management Group A UML profile for Modeling and Analysis of Real Time Embedded Systems (MARTE) (November 2009), vl.O, formal/2009-11-02... [Pg.50]

Object Management Group UML Profile for Schedulability, Performance and Time Specification (January 2005), VI.1, f/05-01-02... [Pg.51]

Object Management Group (OMG) Systems Modelling Language, vol. 1.1, OMG (2008)... [Pg.159]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.22 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.190 ]




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