Scientific and Technological Foundations of Semantic Web Services / Part I: |
Introduction / 1: |
Web Science / 2: |
Motivation / 2.1: |
Technical Solution / 2.2: |
History of the Web / 2.2.1: |
Building the Web / 2.2.2: |
Web in Society / 2.2.3: |
Operationalizing the Web Science for a World of International Commerce / 2.2.4: |
Analyzing the Web / 2.2.5: |
Web 2.0 / 2.3: |
Conclusions / 2.4: |
References |
Service Science / 3: |
What Is a Service? / 3.1: |
Service Analysis, Design, Development and Testing / 3.3: |
Service Orchestration, Composition and Delivery / 3.4: |
Service Innovation / 3.5: |
Service Design Approach / 3.6: |
Service Pricing Method and Economics / 3.7: |
Service Quality Measurement / 3.8: |
Service Technologies / 3.9: |
Service Application / 3.10: |
Web Services / 3.11: |
Service Oriented Computing (SOC) / 4.1: |
Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) / 4.1.2: |
Defining Web Services / 4.2: |
Web Service Technologies / 4.2.2: |
Illustration by a Larger Example / 4.3: |
Summary / 4.4: |
Exercises / 4.5: |
Web2.0 and RESTful Services / 5: |
REST / 5.1: |
Describing RESTful Services / 5.2.2: |
Data Exchange for RESTful Services / 5.2.3: |
AJAX APIs / 5.2.4: |
Examples of RESTful Services / 5.2.5: |
Semantic Web / 5.3: |
Extensions / 6.1: |
Web Service Modeling Ontology Approach / 6.4: |
Web Service Modeling Ontology / 7: |
Ontologies / 7.1: |
Goals / 7.2.2: |
Mediators / 7.2.4: |
The Web Service Modeling Language / 7.3: |
Principles of WSMO / 8.1: |
Logics Families and Semantic Web Services / 8.1.2: |
WSML Language Variants / 8.2: |
WSML Basis / 8.2.2: |
Ontologies in WSML / 8.2.3: |
Web Services in WSML / 8.2.4: |
Goals in WSML / 8.2.5: |
Mediators in WSML / 8.2.6: |
Technologies for Using WSML / 8.2.7: |
Travel Ontology / 8.3: |
Services / 8.4.2: |
Goal / 8.4.3: |
The Web Service Execution Environment / 8.5: |
Service Orientation / 9.1: |
Execution Environment for Semantic Web Services / 9.1.2: |
Governing Principles / 9.1.3: |
SESA Vision / 9.2: |
SESA Middleware / 9.2.2: |
SESA Execution Semantics / 9.2.3: |
Modeling of Business Services / 9.3: |
Execution of Services / 9.3.2: |
Possible Extensions / 9.4: |
Goal Subscription / 9.4.1: |
Complementary Approaches for Web Service Modeling Ontology / 9.5: |
Triple Space Computing for Semantic Web Services / 10: |
Tuplespace Computing / 10.1: |
Triple Space Computing / 10.2.2: |
Triple Space Conceptual Models / 10.2.3: |
Triple Space Architecture / 10.2.4: |
Triple Space and Semantic Web Services / 10.2.5: |
Triple Space and Semantic SOA / 10.2.6: |
OWL-S and Other Approaches / 10.3: |
OWL-S / 11.2.1: |
Service Profile |
Service Grounding / 11.2.2: |
Service Model / 11.2.3: |
An Extension to OWL-S / 11.2.4: |
Tool Support / 11.2.5: |
OWL-S Summary / 11.2.6: |
METEOR-S / 11.3: |
Semantic Annotation of Web services / 11.3.1: |
Semantics-Based Discovery of Web Services / 11.3.2: |
Composition of Web Services / 11.3.3: |
METEOR-S Summary / 11.3.4: |
IRS-III / 11.4: |
Discovery, Selection and Mediation / 11.4.1: |
Communication / 11.4.2: |
Choreography and Orchestration / 11.4.3: |
Lightweight Semantic Web Service Descriptions / 11.5: |
SAWSDL / 12.1: |
WSMO-Lite Service Semantics / 12.2.2: |
WSMO-Lite in SAWSDL / 12.2.3: |
WSMO-Lite for RESTful Services / 12.2.4: |
Real-World Adoption of Semantic Web Services / 12.3: |
What Are SWS Good for? DIP, SUPER, and SOA4All Use Cases / 13: |
Data, Information, and Process Integration with Semantic Web Services (DIP) / 13.1: |
Use Cases / 13.2.1: |
Semantics Utilized for Process Management Within and Between Enterprises (SUPER) / 13.3: |
Service Oriented Architectures for All (SOA4All) / 13.3.1: |
Seekda: The Business Point of View / 13.4.1: |
Crawler / 14.1: |
Search Engine / 14.2.2: |
Bundle Configurator and Assistant / 14.2.3: |
Index / 14.3: |
Scientific and Technological Foundations of Semantic Web Services / Part I: |
Introduction / 1: |
Web Science / 2: |
Motivation / 2.1: |
Technical Solution / 2.2: |
History of the Web / 2.2.1: |