The Lean Approach to Document Taxonomy
One of the most common questions clients ask us when designing an enterprise content management system is how to best define the document taxonomy.
One of the most common questions clients ask us when designing an enterprise content management system is how to best define the document taxonomy.
Pyramid Solutions is excited to attend World of Watson 2016. As gold sponsors, we’ll join an elite group of thought leaders and 20,000 attendees to unleash the power of data, analytics and cognitive technology.
Cognitive computing is taking the business world by storm, and we couldn’t be any more excited to be on the forefront of it all with IBM. In October, we will be gold sponsors at the year’s biggest cognitive conference, IBM World of Watson.
Advanced Case Management for IBM Case Manager is a redbook for IT architects and specialists that details the concepts and capabilities of IBM Case Manager.
Changing to a paperless office has many benefits beyond just money savings. Learn 9 other benefits of going paperless.
Flagstar’s corporate office in Michigan is the primary loan processing hub for its enterprise network of home loan centers and wholesale lending customers in all 50 states. Due to the variety of loan document types needing to be processed, Flagstar was having problems with data entry errors. The bank’s staff was forced to spend tremendous amounts of time reviewing loan documents and correcting mistakes.
People frequently ask us what exactly ECM or enterprise content management means. ECM is the methodology of organizing and processing content leveraging tools that capture, manage, store, organize, analyze, preserve and deliver content such as documents related to an organization.
All too often documents arrive in our inboxes that are many separate files or one huge file containing many documents. These kinds of files are difficult to organize and keep track of. Do you ever wish you could split or merge documents? How many of these instances below can you relate to?
An IBM Content Navigator (ICN) plug-in service is arguably one of the most flexible types of functionality you can add to ICN. An ICN plug-in service can be called from almost anywhere in ICN; the only stipulation is it must be called from a client-side asset like a plug-in action or a plug-in feature. ICN plug-in services can be configured to return almost anything and are primarily used to execute custom searches. They can also be used to work with third-party Java libraries and P8 specific APIs that cannot be accessed from client-side assets.
IBM Content Navigator provides a fantastic mechanism to include custom functionality through the use of plug-ins. Plug-ins can be a bit intimidating, so here are some basics for developing plug-ins for IBM Content Navigator. To start, let’s quickly understand the different functionalities you can add within Content Navigator.
Have you ever noticed that every time you retrieve a document that’s not in the local cache of a server like Image Services (IS) it takes almost exactly two minutes to appear?