- From: Savas Parastatidis <Savas.Parastatidis@newcastle.ac.uk>
- Date: Thu, 26 Aug 2004 15:00:50 +0100
- To: <xml-dist-app@w3.org>, <www-ws-desc@w3.org>, <www-ws-arch@w3.org>, <ogsa-wg@ggf.org>, <wsrf@lists.oasis-open.org>, "ws-caf" <ws-caf@lists.oasis-open.org>, <ws-gaf@newcastle.ac.uk>
Dear all, Apologies if you receive multiple copies of this CFP. Please feel free to distribute it to others. Best regards, .savas. ----------------------------------------------- International Journal of Web Services Research Call for Papers: Special Edition on Web Services Architecture (see: http://ijwsr.ncl.ac.uk/) Web Services have attracted interest from many distinct communities within academic computing science and within the software industry. Each of these communities has its own unique experiences and requirements which they bring with them to the Web Services domain. This in turn has led to a proliferation of disparate techniques for implementing Web Services and building distributed applications based on those Web Services. However, in spite of the wide body of architectural opinion in the Web Services domain, there has been little in the way of structured comparison between the various popular architectural techniques. For this special edition of the International Journal of Web Services Research, the editors are soliciting high-quality original manuscripts which highlight particular architectural styles of building Web Services and Web Services-based applications. In particular the editors would like to receive manuscripts which address (at least) the following characteristics: - The architectural principles for the design and implementation of an individual Web Service; - The architecture and design of distributed applications which utilise Web Services constructed in accordance with the principles outlined above; - An example of the architectural technique under consideration. This example should consider the implications for both building individual services and applications composed from those services. Of particular interest would be real experiences from existing or future deployments; - Interoperability issues within the favoured architectural domain, and with those Web Services which have been developed outside of that domain. Papers should not focus on implementation details or platform specific features (unless they have a significant impact on the chosen architecture style or they are used to emphasize/prove the paper's thesis). Instead, the papers should focus on the salient architectural philosophies, actors, constraints, requirements, etc. which underlie Web Services as components for building distributed applications. Submission Each research paper must be an original submission and should be between 5,500 and 8,000 words that uses rigorous research supported by adequate reference citations. Each paper must be submitted electronically in Word or RTF format, follow the APA (American Psychological Association) formatting guidlines*, and be accompanied by the authors biographies (100-150 words), the authors mailing addresses and email addresses, and follo. Formatting guidlines can be found at Papers should reach the editors no later than 1st November 2004. Accepted authors will be notified by 1st December 2004, and final versions of each paper are required by 22nd December 2004. Editors Dr. Jim Webber (jim@webber.name, http://jim.webber.name) Dr. Savas Parastatidis (savas@parastatidis.name, http://savas.parastatidis.name) ------------------------------ * Some useful links on APA APA Style Website APA style essentials Using American Psychological Association (APA) Format APA Style Template for Microsoft Word (by Derek Gwinn)
Received on Thursday, 26 August 2004 14:01:40 UTC