Semantic Web services (SWS) has been a vigorous technology research
area for about six years. A great deal of innovative work has been
done, and a great deal remains. Several large research initiatives
have been producing substantial bodies of technology, which are gradually
maturing. SOA vendors are looking seriously at semantic technologies
and have made initial commitments to supporting selected approaches.
In the world of standards, numerous activities have reflected the
strong interest in this work. Perhaps the most visible of these is
Sawsdl (Weerawarana, 2005). Sawsdl recently achieved Recommendation
status at the World Wide Web Consortium. Sawsdl's completion provides
a fitting opportunity to reflect on the state of the art and practice
in SWS - past, present, and future. This two-part installment of
Trends and Controversies discusses what has been accomplished in
SWS, what value SWS can ultimately provide, and where we can go from
here to reap these technologies' benefits.
%0 Journal Article
%1 MartinDomingue07IntelligentSystems1
%A Martin, D.
%A Domingue, J.
%D 2007
%J Intelligent Systems
%K semantic service web
%N 5
%P 12-17
%T Semantic Web Services, Part 1
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/MIS.2007.4338488
%V 22
%X Semantic Web services (SWS) has been a vigorous technology research
area for about six years. A great deal of innovative work has been
done, and a great deal remains. Several large research initiatives
have been producing substantial bodies of technology, which are gradually
maturing. SOA vendors are looking seriously at semantic technologies
and have made initial commitments to supporting selected approaches.
In the world of standards, numerous activities have reflected the
strong interest in this work. Perhaps the most visible of these is
Sawsdl (Weerawarana, 2005). Sawsdl recently achieved Recommendation
status at the World Wide Web Consortium. Sawsdl's completion provides
a fitting opportunity to reflect on the state of the art and practice
in SWS - past, present, and future. This two-part installment of
Trends and Controversies discusses what has been accomplished in
SWS, what value SWS can ultimately provide, and where we can go from
here to reap these technologies' benefits.
@article{MartinDomingue07IntelligentSystems1,
abstract = {Semantic Web services (SWS) has been a vigorous technology research
area for about six years. A great deal of innovative work has been
done, and a great deal remains. Several large research initiatives
have been producing substantial bodies of technology, which are gradually
maturing. SOA vendors are looking seriously at semantic technologies
and have made initial commitments to supporting selected approaches.
In the world of standards, numerous activities have reflected the
strong interest in this work. Perhaps the most visible of these is
Sawsdl (Weerawarana, 2005). Sawsdl recently achieved Recommendation
status at the World Wide Web Consortium. Sawsdl's completion provides
a fitting opportunity to reflect on the state of the art and practice
in SWS - past, present, and future. This two-part installment of
Trends and Controversies discusses what has been accomplished in
SWS, what value SWS can ultimately provide, and where we can go from
here to reap these technologies' benefits.},
added-at = {2009-01-21T21:50:19.000+0100},
author = {Martin, D. and Domingue, J.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2a6948875806efd51b0b2841c44f94428/alessandro},
file = {IEEE Digital Library:2007/MartinDomingue07IntelligentSystems1.pdf:PDF},
interhash = {dcdf8c813bef02c37ce4ce9c4f07ca7e},
intrahash = {a6948875806efd51b0b2841c44f94428},
issn = {1541-1672},
journal = {Intelligent Systems},
keywords = {semantic service web},
number = 5,
owner = {flint},
pages = {12-17},
timestamp = {2009-01-22T07:35:31.000+0100},
title = {Semantic Web Services, Part 1},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/MIS.2007.4338488},
volume = 22,
year = 2007
}