Peter Bernus (1949) Hungarian-Australian computer scientist
Peter Bernus, Laszlo Nemes, Günter Schmidt (eds.) Handbook on Enterprise Architecture. 2003. p. 22; Cited in: Dennis F.X. Mathaisel (2007) Sustaining the Military Enterprise. p. 69
Source: The Enterprise Engineering Discipline (1996), p. 1
Peter Bernus (1949) Hungarian-Australian computer scientist
Peter Bernus, Laszlo Nemes, Günter Schmidt (eds.) Handbook on Enterprise Architecture. 2003. p. 22; Cited in: Dennis F.X. Mathaisel (2007) Sustaining the Military Enterprise. p. 69
Erik Proper (1967) Dutch computer scientist
Preface.
Advances in Enterprise Engineering II (2009)
Peter Bernus (1949) Hungarian-Australian computer scientist
Peter Bernus (2003) "Enterprise models for enterprise architecture and ISO9000: 2000." Annual Reviews in Control 27.2 : 211-220.
James Martin (author) (1933–2013) British information technology consultant and writer
Book summary
The great transition (1995)
James Martin (author) (1933–2013) British information technology consultant and writer
Source: Information Engineering (1989), p. 1; cited in Karl E. Kurbel (2008) The making of information systems [electronic resource]. p. 176
Donald H. Liles (1947) American engineer
Source: Enterprise modeling within an enterprise engineering framework (1996), p. 993
Peter Bernus (1949) Hungarian-Australian computer scientist
Peter Bernus, Laszlo Nemes, and R. Morris (1994) " Possibilities and limitations of reusing enterprise models http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.50.1736&rep=rep1&type=pdf." IFAC Workshop, Proceedings from Intelligent Manufacturing Systems.
Erik Proper (1967) Dutch computer scientist
Preface
Advances in Enterprise Engineering II (2009)
John Zachman (1934) American computer scientist
Planning Methodologies: Stage Assessment, Critical Success Factors, Strategy Set Transformation, etc.
Design Approaches: Structured Analysis, Entity-Relationship Approaches, etc.
Tools and Techniques"Problem Statement Language/Problem Statement Analyzer (PSL/PSA), Prototype Development Methodology, Structured Analyses and Design Techniques, etc.
From an historical perspective, BSP and BICS likely will be looked back on as primitive attempts to take an explicit, enterprise-level architectural approach to information systems.
Source: Business Systems Planning and Business Information Control Study: A comparison, 1982, p. 32