The WSLA Framework: Specifying and Monitoring Service Level Agreements for Web Services
Journal of Network and Systems Management
Concurrency and Computation: Practice & Experience
Using service-based content adaptation platform to enhance mobile user experience
Mobility '07 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on mobile technology, applications, and systems and the 1st international symposium on Computer human interaction in mobile technology
Efficient and Secure Content Processing and Distribution by Cooperative Intermediaries
IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems
A classification for content adaptation system
Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Information Integration and Web-based Applications & Services
Solving traveling salesman problem on cluster compute nodes
WSEAS Transactions on Computers
Adapting multimedia Internet content for universal access
IEEE Transactions on Multimedia
Versatile Transcoding Proxy for Internet Content Adaptation
IEEE Transactions on Multimedia
Model for interactive, collaborative and multimedia mobile learning environment
Proceedings of International Conference on Advances in Mobile Computing & Multimedia
A survey on content adaptation systems towards energy consumption awareness
Advances in Multimedia
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In this paper, we propose a service-oriented content adaptation framework and an approach to the Content Adaptation Service Selection (CASS) problem. In particular, the problem is how to assign adaptation tasks (e.g., transcoding, video summarization, etc) together with respective content segments to appropriate adaptation services. Current systems tend to be mostly centralized suffering from single point failures. The proposed algorithm consists of a greedy and single objective assignment function that is constructed on top of an adaptation path tree. The performance of the proposed service selection framework is studied in terms of efficiency of service selection execution under various conditions. The results indicate that the proposed policy performs substantially better than the baseline approach.