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Web Information Systems Engineering: WISE 2005: 6th International Conference on Web Information Systems Engineering, New York, NY, USA, November 20-22, 2005, Proceedings

Anne H. H. Ngu ; Masaru Kitsuregawa ; Erich J. Neuhold ; Jen-Yao Chung ; Quan Z. Sheng (eds.)

En conferencia: 6º International Conference on Web Information Systems Engineering (WISE) . New York, NY, USA . November 20, 2005 - November 22, 2005

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Popular Computer Science; Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet); Information Storage and Retrieval; Database Management; Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics); Computers and Society

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2005 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-540-30017-5

ISBN electrónico

978-3-540-32286-3

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005

Tabla de contenidos

An Effective Approach for Content Delivery in an Evolving Intranet Environment – A Case Study of the Largest Telecom Company in Taiwan

Chih-Chin Liang; Ping-Yu Hsu; Jun-Der Leu; Hsing Luh

Being the dominant telecommunication company in Taiwan, ChungHwa Telecom Co., Ltd., CHT is her symbol listed on the New York Stock Exchange, provides major communication services to more than 23 million people living in Taiwan. CHT has vast number of software developed on client-server or web-based architectures with client software installed in more than ten thousand client computers spreading over the entire nation. Since telecommunication industry evolved in fast pace, the software functions are constantly changing. The changes have to be reflected in all client software before new services can be launched. Thus, the cost and time in distributing contents to client computers has become a major concern in CHT. To improve the efficiency of contents distribution, this research helps CHT develop new software to automatically distribute contents to client computers. To minimize the chance of system locks and balance contents distribution loading, in the new system, each dispatching server sends update contents to no more than three other servers. The contents are delivered with hybrid routing strategy that combines both fixed and adaptive routing strategies. With its low error rate and speedy distribution, the new system reduces the man-minutes per year required to manage the contents distribution of a client server system from 14,227.2 minutes to 1,144 minutes, namely reduces 92% of the time. The user satisfaction of the system was also found to be above 80% among six factors of the measurement designed by Bailey, et al. [1].

Palabras clave: intranet systems; system integration; routing algorithms.

- Industry-4: Web Infrastructure | Pp. 740-749

Achieving Decision Consistency Across the SOA-Based Enterprise Using Business Rules Management Systems

James Taylor

The adoption of a service-oriented architecture (SOA) provides businesses with the ability to rapidly deploy new applications and easily integrate with other component applications both inside and outside the organization. This decentralized application environment provides a great deal of flexibility for business units and IT departments, but it also creates difficulty in managing the consistency of business decisions delivered through various applications. Business rules management systems (BRMS) provide a mechanism for managing decision logic and act as a conductor in order to align application decision behavior. The key to BRMS is the use of a centralized rules repository, within which resides the decision logic applications use to interact with their customers. Applications communicate with a rules engine in order to process those business rules specific to the decision required for the particular application and situational context. This paper will show how business rules management systems fit within a service-oriented architecture, how BRMS can act as intermediary between service-based applications and legacy applications, and how companies are using BRMS to manage decision processes across the enterprise.

Palabras clave: Decision Logic; Business Rule; Work Order; Hewlett Packard; Rule Engine.

- Industry-4: Web Infrastructure | Pp. 750-761

Service Design, Implementation and Description (Tutorial)

Marlon Dumas; Andreas Wombacher

There is an increasingly widespread acceptance of service-oriented architectures as a paradigm for integrating heterogeneous software applications. In this paradigm, independently developed and operated applications are exposed as (Web) services that are then interconnected using a set of standard protocols and languages. While the technology for developing basic services and interconnecting them on a point-to-point basis has attained a certain degree of maturity, there remain open challenges when it comes to building and managing services that participate in interactions that do not follow simple request-response patterns.

- Tutorials and Panels | Pp. 762-762

WISE-2005 Tutorial: Web Content Mining

Bing Liu

Web mining aims to develop a new generation of techniques to effectively mine useful information or knowledge from the Web. It consists of Web usage mining, Web structure mining, and Web content mining. Web usage mining refers to the discovery of user access patterns from Web usage logs. Web structure mining tries to discover useful knowledge from the structure of Web hyperlinks. Web content mining aims to extract and mine useful information or knowledge from Web page contents. This tutorial focuses on Web Content Mining. In the past few years, there was a rapid expansion of activities in this area. In this tutorial, I will introduce the main web content mining tasks and problems and state-of-the-art techniques for dealing with them. All parts of the tutorial have a mix of research and industry flavor, addressing seminal research concepts and looking at the technology from an industry angle.

Palabras clave: Concept Hierarchy; Customer Review; Comparative Shopping; Consumer Opinion; Industry Flavor.

- Tutorials and Panels | Pp. 763-763

An Introduction to Data Grid Management Systems

Arun Jagatheesan

We describe a “grid” as a coordinated infrastructure, formed by combining resources that might be owned by distributed and autonomous administrative domains. A data grid infrastructure facilitates a logical view of distributed resources that are shared between autonomous administrative domains. An emerging data storage problem is the management of unstructured data storage resources for inter/intra/multi-enterprise collaborative efforts. A new paradigm in data management systems, apart from traditional file systems and database systems is required. Data grids are being built around the world for coordinated sharing and management of unstructured data storage resources that are distributed at collaborating teams from the same or different enterprises. Data Grid Management System (DGMS) middleware will soon become part of the software infrastructure in many enterprises.

- Tutorials and Panels | Pp. 764-764

Are We Ready for the Service Oriented Architecture?

Stephane Gagnon

This Industry Track Panel poses a strategic question, “Are We Ready for the Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)?” We discuss this issue from both vendor and adopter perspectives in the company of 5 IT Executives. In particular, we go beyond the discussion of SOA standards as such, and try to assess the importance of this approach from the point of view of related technologies, such as Business Process Management, Enterprise Architecture, Configuration Management, Business Rules Systems, and Open Source Solutions.

- Tutorials and Panels | Pp. 765-765

Data Engineering Approach to Design of Web Services

George Feuerlicht

With the wide acceptance of Web Services as the preferred implementation platform for service-oriented applications there is increased interest in how such applications should be designed. While there are similarities between software components and services there is now a general agreement that mapping existing components directly to Web Services leads to suboptimal design and results in poor performance and scalability.Most practitioners recommend the use of coarse-grained, message-orientedWeb Service that minimize the number of messages and avoid the need to maintain state information between invocations. We argue that the design of message structures used as Web Services payloads directly impacts on application interoperability, and that excessive use of coarse-grained, document-centric message structures results in poor reuse and undesirable interdependencies between services. Our approach provides a framework for the design message structures using data engineering principles. We consider the impact of increasing message granularity on cohesion and coupling of service-oriented applications and analyze associated design trade-offs.

- Poster | Pp. 766-767