7th International Joint Conference on Service Oriented Computing (original) (raw)
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Co-located with 6th International Conference on Service Oriented Computing (ICSOC)
2008
Proceedings Sponsor: IBM Research, USACopyright c○2008 for the individual papers by the papers ’ authors. Copying permitted for private and academic purposes. Re-publication of material from this volume requires permission by the copyright owners. Preface Service oriented computing (SOC) has rapidly transformed from a vision, in the beginning of the century, to realisation in paradigms such as Web services, Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) and cloud services. While this has provided the industry and practitioners with the opportunities for a new generation of products and services, it has brought forward a tremendous amount of challenges and open issues for researchers. The International Conferences on Service Oriented Computing (ICSOC) is a pioneering event for researchers, practitioners and industry leaders to discuss and share the success and achievements in this area. The ICSOC PhD Symposium, as part of the ICSOC conference, is an international forum for PhD students working in the ...
05462 Abstracts Collection -- Service Oriented Computing (SOC)
From 15.11.05 to 18.11.05, the Dagstuhl Seminar 05462 ``Service Oriented Computing (SOC)'' was held in the International Conference and Research Center (IBFI), Schloss Dagstuhl. During the seminar, several participants presented their current research, and ongoing work and open problems were discussed. Abstracts of the presentations given during the seminar as well as abstracts of seminar results and ideas are put together in this paper. The first section describes the seminar topics and goals in general. Links to extended abstracts or full papers are provided, if available. @InProceedings{krmer_et_al:DSP:2006:579, author = {Bernd J. Kr{"a}mer and Michael P. Papazoglou and Francisco Cubera}, title = {05462 Abstracts Collection -- Service Oriented Computing (SOC)}, booktitle = {Service Oriented Computing (SOC)}, year = {2006}, editor = {Francisco Cubera and Bernd J. Kr{"a}mer and Michael P. Papazoglou}, number = {05462}, series = {Dagstuhl Seminar Proceedings}, ISSN...
Forum Session at the First International Conference on Service Oriented Computing (ICSOC03)
2003
The First International Conference on Service Oriented Computing (ICSOC) was held in Trento, December 15-18, 2003. The focus of the conference---Service Oriented Computing (SOC)---is the new emerging paradigm for distributed computing and e-business processing that has evolved from object-oriented and component computing to enable building agile networks of collaborating business applications distributed within and across organizational boundaries.
SPECIAL ISSUE ON SERVICE-ORIENTED COMPUTING GUEST EDITORS' INTRODUCTION
2005
Service-Oriented Computing is an emerging computing paradigm for building cooperative information system in which the concepts of distribution, openness, asynchronous messaging and lack of centralized control take a leading role. In this context, applications are built out of individual services that expose functionalities by publishing in appropriate repositories their interfaces, and abstracting entirely from the underlying implementation.
Service-oriented computing: semantics, processes, agents
2005
The current World-Wide Web was intended to be used by people, but most experts, including the founder of the WWW, Tim Berners-Lee, agree that the future WWW will have to evolve to include usage by computer systems. Moreover, the impact of computer usage will exceed that of human usage. The evolution is expected to occur through the design and deployment of Web services. The term Web services sometimes refers to services that employ a particular set of basic standards. Since these standards are all but incidental to the key concepts of services and services apply even in settings strictly different from the WWW, it is helpful to think of service-oriented computing as a more general topic.
Service-Oriented Computing: State of the Art and Research Challenges
Computer, 2007
including the Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) for transmitting data, the Web Services Description Language (WSDL) for defining services, and the Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL4WS) for orchestrating services. SOC lets developers dynamically grow application portfolios more quickly than ever before by • creating compound solutions that use internal organizational software assets, including enterprise information and legacy systems, and • combining these solutions with external components possibly residing in remote networks. The visionary promise of SOC is that it will be possible to easily assemble application components into a loosely coupled network of services that can create dynamic business processes and agile applications that span organizations and computing platforms. 3 Such services will go well beyond simply exchanging information-the dominating mechanism for application integration today-to accessing, programming, and integrating application services encapsulated within old and new applications. Key to realizing this vision is the service-oriented architecture. SOA is a logical way of designing a software system to provide services either to end-user Service-oriented computing promotes the idea of assembling application components into a network of services that can be loosely coupled to create flexible, dynamic business processes and agile applications that span organizations and computing platforms. An SOC research road map provides a context for exploring ongoing research activities.
Service-Oriented Computing: State-of-the-Art and Open Research Issues
2003
Abstract Service-Oriented Computing (SOC) is the computing paradigm that utilizes services as fundamental elements for developing applications/solutions. To build the service model, SOC relies on the Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), which is a way of reorganizing software applications and infrastructure into a set of interacting services.