Internet of Things (IoT) Orchestrator

adeel

VIP Member
Hello there

Is anyone setup and using Internet of Things (IoT) Orchestrator with any device etc?

Please share your experience etc.

Thanks
AD
 
Yes. I have implemented in my office lab; and ran the simulator orchestrations successfully.
 
You do realise that most of that youtube clip show features of the IoT Cloud service and not orchestrator. The studio is an improvement over hand coding XML files but still takes some work to build up the orchestrations and considering there's no object management (they are supposed to be a UDO in the future) the management of all of the parts is the same as 9.1.5.
 
The JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Internet of Things (IoT) Orchestrator Studio is built for the business analyst—not the programmer—to design and deploy orchestrations. The new IoT Orchestrator Studio provides an intuitive graphical user interface that allows a business analyst to create the rules, cross-references, and service requests that make up an IoT orchestration. The graphical user interface of the IoT Orchestrator Studio enables business analysts to build and deploy their own orchestrations without requiring programming skills.
 
The JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Internet of Things (IoT) Orchestrator Studio is built for the business analyst—not the programmer—to design and deploy orchestrations. The new IoT Orchestrator Studio provides an intuitive graphical user interface that allows a business analyst to create the rules, cross-references, and service requests that make up an IoT orchestration. The graphical user interface of the IoT Orchestrator Studio enables business analysts to build and deploy their own orchestrations without requiring programming skills.

If you're just going to quote a press release you should probably acknowledge the Author. Bob Monahan - January 2016 in this case.
 
Thanks. Not claiming the quote or the technology, just providing information merely as a conduit and as an active and happy user of this site to try to help others who have helped me over the years. Thanks again and apologies if anyone offended.

Al
 
Not offended but for a forum to be useful it should add to the collective knowledge and people should be able to identify where that knowledge came from. If your statement was based on your own experience implementing the IoT Orchestrator Studio as an independent member of the JDE community it would be a whole lot different than just quoting marketing material from Oracle. If you think content from Oracle contributes to a discussion by all means reference it but I think the source should be acknowledged.
 
Understood and agreed. Thanks for taking the time to express your view, I appreciate it very much. And I will do my best to always identify sources of information in the future.
 
Catching up on threads for the last couple of weeks, and in reading a bunch at once, I see you've made several other posts since this one where you cut and pasted directly from an oracle support document without mentioning where you got the information. It's great when people are willing to put in time to be part of the community and help out people who have problems, but presenting copied information as "from Oracle document #X" so that the person can read the entire document for themselves/see any other linked docs adds a lot of value. Additionally, it would clarify the cases where you DO have specific experience and depth of knowledge so that people know what subjects you really are a great resource on. JDEList has long been the best place to go for great expert advice, and being clear about where stuff comes from always helps keep that atmosphere going. Thanks! :)
 
Al has already apologized and agreed earlier on that.
Your suggestion is good about Oracle doc id or sort of link will help also.

Thanks everyone!
 
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