Do you want a free BPM tool that grows with your company? ADONIS simplifies process modelling by providing intuitive ways of designing your value chain and business processes. Quickly capture your processes and link them to your process architecture. ADONIS makes your data work for you, helping you answer the tough questions to identify opportunities for process improvement. Increase the collaborative process engagement in your organization through better synergies between the various stakeholders and departments. Collect feedback and empower the whole organization to continuously improve. Explore how easy it is to bring content and analysis results from ADONIS to other tools, impressing in presentations and taking command over your data.

Node.js web framework
notes for Adonis
Adonis [a] was the mortal lover of the goddess Aphrodite in Greek mythology. In Ovid 's first-century AD telling of the myth, he was conceived after Aphrodite cursed his mother Myrrha to lust after her own father , King Cinyras of Cyprus. Myrrha had sex with her father in complete darkness for nine nights, but he discovered her identity and chased her with a sword. The gods transformed her into a myrrh tree and, in the form of a tree, she gave birth to Adonis. Aphrodite found the infant and gave him to be raised by Persephone , the queen of the Underworld. Adonis grew into an astonishingly handsome young man, causing Aphrodite and Persephone to feud over him, with Zeus eventually decreeing that Adonis would spend one third of the year in the Underworld with Persephone, one third of the year with Aphrodite, and the final third of the year with whomever he chose.
MODEL PROCESSES EASILY
To save this word, you'll need to log in. Adonis, like Narcissus, was a beautiful youth in Greek mythology. He was loved by both Aphrodite, goddess of love and beauty, and Persephone, goddess of the underworld. One day while hunting, he was killed by a wild boar. In answer to Aphrodite's pleas, Zeus allowed him to spend half the year with her and half in the underworld. Today a man called an Adonis probably has strikingly fine features, low body fat, rippling muscles—and a certain vain attitude of overconfidence.
Adonis , in Greek mythology , a youth of remarkable beauty, the favourite of the goddess Aphrodite identified with Venus by the Romans. Traditionally, he was the product of the incestuous love Smyrna Myrrha entertained for her own father, the Syrian king Theias. Charmed by his beauty, Aphrodite put the newborn infant Adonis in a box and handed him over to the care of Persephone , the queen of the underworld, who afterward refused to give him up. An appeal was made to Zeus , the king of the gods, who decided that Adonis should spend a third of the year with Persephone and a third with Aphrodite, the remaining third being at his own disposal.