- From: Katia Sycara <katia@cs.cmu.edu>
- Date: Sat, 19 Oct 2002 09:29:35 -0400
- To: David Booth <dbooth@w3.org>, Heather Kreger <kreger@us.ibm.com>, www-ws-arch@w3.org
+1! I would be interested in helping define a WS ontology in OWL. --Katia -------------------------- -----Original Message----- From: www-ws-arch-request@w3.org [mailto:www-ws-arch-request@w3.org]On Behalf Of David Booth Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2002 3:56 PM To: Heather Kreger; www-ws-arch@w3.org Subject: Re: remembering business data and taxonomy in description Heather, What you have described is formally called an "ontology": http://www.w3.org/2002/Talks/0813-semweb-dbooth/slide37-0.html Clearly, if we do define a WS ontology for this purpose, then either RDF or W3C's emerging Web Ontology Language (known as "OWL") should be used. This will: (a) ensure maximum flexibility and re-use potential; and (b) ensure that the ontologies will always be cleanly extensible, without breaking existing software and without having to wait for a standards group to sanctify new "facts" or "rules" that people want to use. At 07:07 PM 10/11/2002 -0400, Heather Kreger wrote: >After the stack was accepted as a starting point at the face to face, >someone brought up the need for business description and taxonomy to >be described and associated with a service in a way that does not prescribe >that UDDI be used. > >We had initially thought that this may mean a new description layer for the >stack. But >this didn't feel right. > >However, I have talked with some others about this >and would like to propose that this type of information is actually >'information about the >service'. We had put other 'information about the service' in the policy >layer and I would >like to propose that this is where business and taxonomies should go as >well. >I believe that policies will contain 'facts' and 'rules'. Business data and >taxonomies >are facts. >Once we have a policy language (ws-policy), there will need to be groups >who define >standards 'sets' of policies to standardize keywords and concepts for >things like 'timeout', etc. >I think that some group will need to define a standard owning business >policy and >taxonomy policy. I think that the UDDIEntry defined by the UDDI >specification > provides an excellent set of starter data for such a group. > >Opinions? -- David Booth W3C Fellow / Hewlett-Packard Telephone: +1.617.253.1273
Received on Saturday, 19 October 2002 09:30:01 UTC