Title
Illuminating the dark side of web services
Abstract
Web Services are widely heralded as a step to the next generation of computing and a basis for resolving integration, one of the largest IT challenges. With essentially all vendors supporting Web Services and considerable focus on Web Services, it may appear as if Web Services are maturing consistent with analyst projections for the 2003 to 2005 period. The reality is quite different. Web Services are in their infancy. Designing, developing, and deploying a Service-Oriented computing model over the Internet is a massive undertaking. Having understood the potential of Web Services, like seeing the Moon on a clear night, it is now time to illuminate the dark side of Web Services. The purpose of this panel is to review the status of the development and usage of Web Services and identify significant technical challenges to which the database community should contribute. Web Services has much to learn from the development of database management systems (DBMSs) and the DBMS community has much to contribute to realizing Web Services. Ted Codd's classic 1970 paper defined a complete computational model, the relational data model including the relational calculus. A decade of work by the major software vendors and the emerging data management research community was required to develop and implement the infrastructure, languages, and
Year
DOI
Venue
2003
10.1016/B978-012722442-8/50102-6
VLDB
Keywords
Field
DocType
web service,dark side,service oriented computing,computer model,relational data model,database management system,data management
Services computing,World Wide Web,Distributed object,Distributed Computing Environment,Computer science,Common Object Request Broker Architecture,Data Web,Object request broker,Web service,Service-oriented architecture,Database
Conference
ISSN
ISBN
Citations 
Proceedings 2003 VLDB Conference
0-12-722442-4
5
PageRank 
References 
Authors
1.07
0
1
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Michael L. Brodie11005626.90