yes. requires 512 memory.to run in eclipse
> From: "Jacques Le Roux" <
[hidden email]>
>
>
>> From: "BJ Freeman" <
[hidden email]>
>>
>>> I guess i am a zealot. Just trying not to show it. LOL
>>> from
http://www.uml.org/>>> The Unified Modeling Language™ - UML - is OMG's most-used specification,
>>> and the way the world models not only application structure, behavior,
>>> and architecture, but also business process and data structure.
>>> I use eclipse
>>>
http://www.visual-paradigm.com/product/sde/ec/productinfosdeceec.jsp>> Thanks for the link BJ
>>
>> Jacques
>
> Wooowww it's huge ! (92Mo) I think I will keep Poseidon...
>
>
>>> Jacques Le Roux sent the following on 6/29/2006 1:08 PM:
>>>> I'm not a zealot of UML and I'm not using it for the moment. But I think
>> it's a
>>>> good way to ease understanding between people, even not techies.
>>>>
>>>> In fact, Neogia
http://www.nereide.biz/ is build this way partially. They
>> write
>>>> UML graphs with Poseidon
http://gentleware.com/index.php and they use a
>>>> technology that they created with Code Lutin
http://www.codelutin.com/ to
>>>> generate files (every types ASA there is generator to do it). They wrote
>> enough
>>>> generators to ease 70% of the work on Neogia side (Neogia is using OFBiz)
>> they
>>>> claim.
>>>>
>>>> Jacques
>>>>
>>>>> Parkinson's law, though is about work expanding to meet the resources.
>>>>> a lesser known one is the way to win an argument is to speak in an area
>>>>> that the others can not comprehend so they will not show their ignorance
>>>>> by speaking against it.
>>>>>
>>>>> Most of these modeling proposition, are the same, unless you are a
>>>>> zealot about it.
>>>>>
>>>>> which boils down to good luck.
>>>>> LOL.
>>>>>
>>>>> David Welton sent the following on 6/29/2006 4:18 AM:
>>>>>>> I believe that was the Idea behind UML (unified Modeling Language)
>>>>>>>
http://www.omg.org/technology/documents/formal/uml.htm>>>>>>> It really never got accepted. .
>>>>>> I think this aims to be much more specific than UML, which is used for
>>>>>> all kinds of things. It describes services, and how they interact,
>>>>>> rather than database tables or objects, or other low level things of
>>>>>> that nature. Perhaps it has a shot at working if it doesn't try to be
>>>>>> everything to everyone.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Some healthy skepticism is in order, but the idea is interesting. I
>>>>>> would love to offload the design of these processes to my boss, and
>>>>>> let a computer worry about translating them into something runnable
>>>>>> (rather than sitting down and doing it myself:-). But perhaps that's
>>>>>> just a dream, and in reality the system doesn't work out that well, or
>>>>>> requires an army of people to implement.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Anyway, just sort of curious what others thought.
>>>>>>
>>>>
>
>