Author: | James Weber | ISBN: | 9781486429639 |
Publisher: | Emereo Publishing | Publication: | October 24, 2012 |
Imprint: | Emereo Publishing | Language: | English |
Author: | James Weber |
ISBN: | 9781486429639 |
Publisher: | Emereo Publishing |
Publication: | October 24, 2012 |
Imprint: | Emereo Publishing |
Language: | English |
Here's part of the content - you would like to know it all? Delve into this book today!..... : Even though there is no direct measurement that can determine conclusively that the driver was thrown, or that there was an accident, the combination of events allows the situation to be detected and a new event to be created to signify the detected situation.
...Now one use for CEP is to link these separate processes, so that in the case of when the initial process (breakdown monitoring) discovers a malfunction based on metal fatigue (a significant event) an action can be created to exploit the second process (life cycle) to issue a recall on vehicles using the same batch of metal discovered as faulty in the initial process.
... The financial services industry was an early adopter of CEP technology, using complex event processing to structure and contextualize available data so that it could inform trading behavior, specifically algorithmic trading, by identifying opportunities or threats that indicate traders (or automatic trading systems) should buy or sell.
...The timestamps are not required to be ascending (merely non-decreasing) because in practice the time resolution of some systems such as financial data sources can be quite low (milliseconds, microseconds or even nanoseconds), so consecutive events may carry equal timestamps.
There is absolutely nothing that isn't thoroughly covered in the book. It is straightforward, and does an excellent job of explaining all about Complex event processing in key topics and material. There is no reason to invest in any other materials to learn about Complex event processing. You'll understand it all.
Inside the Guide: Complex event processing, Sybase, Service management, Real-time computing, Progress Software, Operational intelligence, OpenPDC, Network management, Nastel, Market liquidity, International Standard Book Number, Financial risk management, Event stream processing, Event correlation, Event Processing Technical Society, Event-driven architecture, Esper (disambiguation), Digital object identifier, Credit card fraud, Business activity monitoring, Artificial intelligence, Algorithmic trading, Abstraction
Here's part of the content - you would like to know it all? Delve into this book today!..... : Even though there is no direct measurement that can determine conclusively that the driver was thrown, or that there was an accident, the combination of events allows the situation to be detected and a new event to be created to signify the detected situation.
...Now one use for CEP is to link these separate processes, so that in the case of when the initial process (breakdown monitoring) discovers a malfunction based on metal fatigue (a significant event) an action can be created to exploit the second process (life cycle) to issue a recall on vehicles using the same batch of metal discovered as faulty in the initial process.
... The financial services industry was an early adopter of CEP technology, using complex event processing to structure and contextualize available data so that it could inform trading behavior, specifically algorithmic trading, by identifying opportunities or threats that indicate traders (or automatic trading systems) should buy or sell.
...The timestamps are not required to be ascending (merely non-decreasing) because in practice the time resolution of some systems such as financial data sources can be quite low (milliseconds, microseconds or even nanoseconds), so consecutive events may carry equal timestamps.
There is absolutely nothing that isn't thoroughly covered in the book. It is straightforward, and does an excellent job of explaining all about Complex event processing in key topics and material. There is no reason to invest in any other materials to learn about Complex event processing. You'll understand it all.
Inside the Guide: Complex event processing, Sybase, Service management, Real-time computing, Progress Software, Operational intelligence, OpenPDC, Network management, Nastel, Market liquidity, International Standard Book Number, Financial risk management, Event stream processing, Event correlation, Event Processing Technical Society, Event-driven architecture, Esper (disambiguation), Digital object identifier, Credit card fraud, Business activity monitoring, Artificial intelligence, Algorithmic trading, Abstraction