- From: Patrick C. K. Hung <cshck@cs.ust.hk>
- Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2004 11:35:04 +0800
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2004 IEEE International Conference on Web Services (ICWS 2004) Theme: Convergence of Web Services, Grid Computing, e-Business and Autonomic Computing July 6-9, 2004, San Diego, California, USA http://conferences.computer.org/icws/2004/ Sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society Technical Community for Services Computing (TCSC) This year we are pleased to present an extremely strong technical program. A total of 230 papers were submitted to ICWS this year (a record by far). Submissions were from over 15 countries. Of the 230 submissions, only 66 were accepted as full research papers. We were fortunate to have about 100 program committee members who assisted us by giving very detailed and timely reviews. All papers went through a thorough review process. At least two or more reviewers reviewed each paper. We had significant online PC discussion for both controversies and for final decision. After extensive discussions, 66 papers were accepted for full paper publication and presentation. A key aspect of ICWS is to bring the worlds of researchers from both Computer Science and Business Management together in a single, high-quality forum. Of the 66 papers accepted, there were CS papers, Business papers, and what we call "bridge" papers as they bridge the gap between the two fields. In addition, we offer a strong industry track with 19 papers from researchers and practioners working in the frontier of Web Services in industry. Furthermore, this year's technical program also contains 16 short papers in which authors are able to give a brief description of their research. Short paper sessions are newly introduced to ICWS this year and we hope to have started a new and fruitful tradition. Finally, ICWS 2004 technical program also includes three poster paper sessions accepted from a separate submission channel enabling work-in-progress results to be shared and disseminated at the conference and 5 tutorials, reviewing the state of art in five different areas related to advances in Web Services. Keynote Address Keynote 1: Convergence of Web Services, Grid Services and Business Processes Dr. Donald F. Ferguson IBM Fellow, Member IBM Academy of Technology Chief Architect, IBM Software Group Chairman of IBM SWG Architecture Board Abstract: The "Grid" and "Web services" are two of the fastest growing and most discussed areas in academic and commercial computing literature. Mergers, acquisition, partnerships and economic dynamics are driving commercial investment in business process (re)-engineering. This talk will discuss the recent and important convergence of many of these concepts into enterprise service architectures, which are forming the base for the next generation of commercial and academic distributed computing. Keynote 2: Extending the Innovation Ecosystem Sharon Nunes Vice President, Emerging Business IBM Research Yorktown Heights, New York Abstract: What Is Innovation? It's not always about inventing something entirely new. Innovation occurs at the intersection of invention and insight. It's about the application of invention ? the fusion of new developments and new approaches to solve problems. (Sam Palmisano, Delivered at the Council on Competitiveness Annual Meeting, Washington, D.C., October 30, 2003). In the 21st Century, we are approaching fundamental limits of technology that will drive new paradigms for software and systems. Software complexity is driving a rethinking of software development. There are external forces including government and societal, that are significantly influencing the technology agenda. In addition, the changing business environment demands new approaches to use of IT ? transformation must be fueled by innovation. Can we manage innovation? Can we create a culture of innovation? Can we work with customers and partners to drive innovation? Various innovation approaches are being deployed to enhance IBM's innovation ecosystem. Lessons learned and future innovation drivers will be presented. Keynote 3: Going Public with Software-as-a-Service Ephraim Feig Chief Technology Officer and Chief Marketing Officer Kintera, Inc. San Diego, California, USA Abstract: The market is demanding seamless application integration. Those who can deliver on this demand will be rewarded. Web services will play a key role in making it possible, affordable, and ease to use. Keynote 4: Business Services Networks Jay M. Tenenbaum Chairman of CommerceNet Director of Webify Solutions and Medstory Inc. Abstract: The fundamental challenge of e-commerce is enabling companies to do business with one another across a network, despite different business processes and computer systems. Traditionally, these problems were overcome through expensive custom point-to-point integration or Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) networks. The promise of the Internet, by contrast, is an open e-business platform where companies can do business spontaneously with anyone, anywhere, anytime. Business Services Networks fulfill that vision. This talk introduces the concept of Business Services Networks and their profound business and technology implications for e-commerce. BSNs are Internet business communities where companies collaborate through loosely coupled business services. Participants register business services (e.g., place an order, make a payment) that others can discover and incorporate into their own business processes with a few clicks of a mouse. Companies can build on each other's services, creating new services and linking them into industry-transforming, network-centric business models. We also discuss evolution of BSNs since early 1990's, emerging technological underpinnings, and CommerceNet's role in catalyzing their adoption. Keynote 5: Managing the Intelligent Enterprise Umeshwar Dayal HP Fellow and Director Intelligent Enterprise Technologies Laboratory Hewlett-Packard Labs. Umeshwar.dayal@hp.com Abstract Over the last few years, we have seen the transformation of the traditional monolithic enterprise, in which all operations were performed in-house, to the extended enterprise, which consists of a network of collaborating entities. Global operations, outsourcing, and increasing specialization have all contributed to this trend. One challenge facing the extended enterprise is how to reconnect the information flows and business processes that were disconnected as the enterprise disaggregated. The emergence of web services, service-oriented architectures, and business process modeling and execution standards are helping to address this challenge. Our contention is that the next phase of evolution is the rise of the intelligent enterprise, which is characterized by being able to adapt quickly to changes in its operating environment. The intelligent enterprise monitors its own business processes and its interactions with customers, partners, suppliers, and collaborators; it understands how this information relates to its business objectives; and it acts to control and optimize its operations to meet its business objectives. Decisions are made quickly and accurately to modify business processes on the fly, dynamically allocate resources, or change business partners (e.g., suppliers, service providers) and partnerships (e.g., establish new service level agreements). This talk will describe challenges in managing the business operations of an intelligent enterprise. While a plethora of tools exist for managing the IT infrastructure (servers, storage, and network resources) of the enterprise, there is little systematic support today for the closed loop management and control of business operations. We will describe technology approaches to intelligent business operations management that we are pursuing at HP Labs., the progress we have made, and some open research questions. PANELS Panel 1: Future of Service-Oriented Computing Moderator: Calton Pu, Georgia Tech, USA Panel 2: Innovative Applications using Web Services Moderator: Ephraim Feig, Kintera.com, USA Panel 3: Quality of Service Management Moderator: Dejan Milojicic, HP Labs, USA Panel 4: Security and Privacy in Web Services Moderator: TBA TUTORIALS 1. Service Oriented Architectures and Semantic Web Process Francisco Curbera, Amit Sheth, and Kunal Verma 2. Data Grid and Gridflow Management Systems Arun Jagatheesan and Reggan Moore 3. Complex Event Processing Opher Etzion 4. Successful Service-oriented Architecture with Web services: Beyond the Hype Ali Arsanjani 5. Semantic Web services: Current Status and Future Directions Massimo Paolucci and Katia Sycara
Received on Sunday, 13 June 2004 23:38:17 UTC