An Architectural Concept for Knowledge Integration in Inter-Administration Computing. Quirchmayr, G. & Tagg, R. In pages 67-77.
abstract   bibtex   
Advances in Business-to-Business electronic commerce now offer opportunities for improved efficiency and profitability in the commercial sector. But similar opportunities are not yet commonplace for inter-administration situations. Differences in goals mean that packaged software solutions do not carry across well to administrative computing. However processes, shared where appropriate, are still the core element of inter-organizational knowledge, although in administration there is a greater emphasis on rules and legislation, and the payoffs to cooperating administrative units are not always clear. In this paper a layered architecture, derived from one previously proposed for virtual enterprises, is introduced. This architecture includes a high level service request layer, process guidance agents, context-aware work environments and the concept of "just enough" structuring.
@inproceedings{ qui02,
  crossref = {kmgov2002},
  author = {Gerald Quirchmayr and Roger Tagg},
  title = {An Architectural Concept for Knowledge Integration in Inter-Administration Computing},
  pages = {67-77},
  uri = {http://falcon.ifs.uni-linz.ac.at/KMGov2002/kmgov2.pdf},
  abstract = {Advances in Business-to-Business electronic commerce now offer opportunities for improved efficiency and profitability in the commercial sector. But similar opportunities are not yet commonplace for inter-administration situations. Differences in goals mean that packaged software solutions do not carry across well to administrative computing. However processes, shared where appropriate, are still the core element of inter-organizational knowledge, although in administration there is a greater emphasis on rules and legislation, and the payoffs to cooperating administrative units are not always clear. In this paper a layered architecture, derived from one previously proposed for virtual enterprises, is introduced. This architecture includes a high level service request layer, process guidance agents, context-aware work environments and the concept of "just enough" structuring.}
}

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