Web Services, E-Business, and the Semantic Web Second International Workshop, WES 2003, Klagenfurt, Austria, June 16-17, 2003, Revised Selected Papers / [electronic resource] : edited by Christoph J. Bussler, Dieter Fensel, Maria E. Orlowska, Jian Yang. - Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2004. - X, 150 p. online resource. - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 3095 0302-9743 ; . - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 3095 .

Keynote Presentations -- Enterprise Business Integration in 2010A.D. -- Old Ontology Wine in New Semantic Bags, and Other Scalability Issues -- Research Paper Track -- Meta-workflows and ESP: A Framework for Coordination, Exception Handling and Adaptability in Workflow Systems -- A Foundational Vision of e-Services -- Querying Spatial Resources. An Approach to the Semantic Geospatial Web -- A Framework for E-markets: Monitoring Contract Fulfillment -- Simple Obligation and Right Model (SORM) – for the Runtime Management of Electronic Service Contracts -- Integrating Context in Modelling for Web Information Systems -- Using Message-Oriented Middleware for Reliable Web Services Messaging -- Reusability Constructs in the Web Service Offerings Language (WSOL) -- Event Based Web Service Description and Coordination -- A New Web Application Development Methodology: Web Service Composition.

The 2nd Workshop on Web Services, E-Business, and the Semantic Web (WES) was held during June 16–17, 2003 in conjunction with CAiSE 2003, the 15th International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering. The Internet is changing the way businesses operate. Organizations are using the Web to deliver their goods and services, to find trading partners, and to link their existing (maybe legacy) applications to other applications. Web services are rapidly becoming the enabling technology of today’s e-business and e-commerce systems, and will soon transform the Web as it is now into a distributed computation and application fra- work. On the other hand, e-business as an emerging concept is also impacting software - plications, the everyday services landscape, and the way we do things in almost each domain of our life. There is already a body of experience accumulated to demonstrate the difference between just having an online presence and using the Web as a stra- gic and functional medium in e-business-to-business interaction (B2B) as well as marketplaces. Finally, the emerging Semantic Web paradigm promises to annotate Web artifacts to enable automated reasoning about them. When applied to e-services, the paradigm hopes to provide substantial automation for activities such as discovery, invocation, assembly, and monitoring of e-services. But much work remains to be done before realizing this vision.

9783540259824

10.1007/b98797 doi


Computer science.
Database management.
Information storage and retrieval systems.
Information systems.
Management information systems.
Computer Science.
Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet).
Information Storage and Retrieval.
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
Database Management.
Computers and Society.
Business Information Systems.

QA76.76.A65

005.7
The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, India

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