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Semantic Web Services [electronic resource] / by Dieter Fensel, Federico Michele Facca, Elena Simperl, Ioan Toma.

By: Fensel, Dieter [author.].
Contributor(s): Facca, Federico Michele [author.] | Simperl, Elena [author.] | Toma, Ioan [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2011Description: XI, 357p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783642191930.Subject(s): Computer science | Software engineering | Artificial intelligence | Management information systems | Computer Science | Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet) | Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics) | Business Information Systems | Software EngineeringDDC classification: 005.7 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction -- Web Science -- Service Science -- Web Services -- Web2.0 and RESTful Services -- SemanticWeb -- Web Service Modeling Ontology -- The Web Service Modeling Language -- The Web Service Execution Environment -- Triple Space Computing for SemanticWeb Services -- OWL-S and Other Approaches -- Lightweight SemanticWeb Service Descriptions -- SWS Are Good For What: dip, SUPER, and SOA4All Use Cases -- Seekda: The Business Point of View.-.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: A paradigm shift is taking place in computer science: one generation ago, we learned to abstract from hardware to software, now we are abstracting from software to serviceware implemented through service-oriented computing. Yet ensuring interoperability in open, heterogeneous, and dynamically changing environments, such as the Internet, remains a major challenge for actual machine-to-machine integration. Usually significant problems in aligning data, processes, and protocols appear as soon as a specific piece of functionality is used within a different application context. The Semantic Web Services (SWS) approach is about describing services with metadata on the basis of domain ontologies as a means to enable their automatic location, execution, combination, and use. Fensel and his coauthors provide a comprehensive overview of SWS in line with actual industrial practice. They introduce the main sociotechnological components that ground the SWS vision (like Web Science, Service Science, and service-oriented architectures) and several approaches that realize it, e.g. the Web Service Modeling Framework, OWL-S, and RESTful services. The real-world relevance is emphasized through a series of case studies from large-scale R&D projects and a business-oriented proposition from the SWS technology provider Seekda. Each chapter of the book is structured according to a predefined template, covering both theoretical and practical aspects, and including walk-through examples and hands-on exercises.  Additional learning material is available on the book website www.swsbook.org. With its additional features, the book is ideally suited as the basis for courses or self-study in this field, and it may also serve as a reference for researchers looking for a state-of-the-art overview of formalisms, methods, tools, and applications related to SWS.
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Introduction -- Web Science -- Service Science -- Web Services -- Web2.0 and RESTful Services -- SemanticWeb -- Web Service Modeling Ontology -- The Web Service Modeling Language -- The Web Service Execution Environment -- Triple Space Computing for SemanticWeb Services -- OWL-S and Other Approaches -- Lightweight SemanticWeb Service Descriptions -- SWS Are Good For What: dip, SUPER, and SOA4All Use Cases -- Seekda: The Business Point of View.-.

A paradigm shift is taking place in computer science: one generation ago, we learned to abstract from hardware to software, now we are abstracting from software to serviceware implemented through service-oriented computing. Yet ensuring interoperability in open, heterogeneous, and dynamically changing environments, such as the Internet, remains a major challenge for actual machine-to-machine integration. Usually significant problems in aligning data, processes, and protocols appear as soon as a specific piece of functionality is used within a different application context. The Semantic Web Services (SWS) approach is about describing services with metadata on the basis of domain ontologies as a means to enable their automatic location, execution, combination, and use. Fensel and his coauthors provide a comprehensive overview of SWS in line with actual industrial practice. They introduce the main sociotechnological components that ground the SWS vision (like Web Science, Service Science, and service-oriented architectures) and several approaches that realize it, e.g. the Web Service Modeling Framework, OWL-S, and RESTful services. The real-world relevance is emphasized through a series of case studies from large-scale R&D projects and a business-oriented proposition from the SWS technology provider Seekda. Each chapter of the book is structured according to a predefined template, covering both theoretical and practical aspects, and including walk-through examples and hands-on exercises.  Additional learning material is available on the book website www.swsbook.org. With its additional features, the book is ideally suited as the basis for courses or self-study in this field, and it may also serve as a reference for researchers looking for a state-of-the-art overview of formalisms, methods, tools, and applications related to SWS.

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