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Enterprise 2.0 Tool Survey 2010

The results of the Enterprise 2.0 Tool Survey 2010 are online available now.

The survey 2010 originated from the Bachelor Thesis Review and Extension of the sebis Enterprise 2.0 Tool Survey in which Andreas Mirbeth evaluated the tools Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Tricia.

The evaulation of more tools is in progess and the results will be made available as soon as possible.


Articles on EAM published in EAM practice book

The invited articles EAM-Werkzeuge and Vergangenheit, Gegenwart und Zukunft von EAM were published in the book Enterprise Architecture Management in der Praxis - Wandel, Komplexität und IT-Kosten im Unternehmen beherrschen of symposion Verlag. In the first article, the author team (J.H.Keuntje, S.Buckl, F.Matthes, C.M.Schweda) discusses on the different approaches taken by today's EAM tools. Revisiting the state-of-the-art, the team provides a framework of three essential dimensions of typical tooling approaches, and explains how these characteristics may be used to find the best-suited tool. In the second article, the author team (F.Matthes, S.Buckl, C.M.Schweda) travels through past and present of the discipline of EAM, providing an overview on well-known approaches as well as the development history of the field. An outlook on future topic concludes the article, pointing towards topics possibly await in the discipline's near future.


Trends for Enterprise Architecture Management and Tools survey launched

The research team members Sabine Buckl, Florian Matthes, Ivan Monahov, Sascha Roth, and Christian M. Schweda in cooperation with Detecon started a survey gathering future trends for enterprise architecture management and tools (TEAMT). Please find more detailed information on the TEAMT project site.


Article on Data Model Driven Implementation of Web Cooperation Systems...


Article on pattern-based design theory building accepted at ICIS2010

The article Utilizing Patterns in Developing Design Theories has been accepted for publication at ICIS2010. In the article the author team (Sabine Buckl, Florian Matthes, and Christian M. Schweda) describe how patterns, i.e. practice-proven solutions for recurring problems, may be used for developing design theories. Accounting for the specific nature of industry-funded and industry-partnered research, the authors further elaborate, how patterns are able to provide practice relevant intermediary results prior to theory completion.