Teaching old services new tricks: adding HATEOAS support as an afterthought
Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on RESTful Design
Extending timestamp-based two phase commit protocol for RESTful services to meet business rules
Proceedings of the 2011 ACM Symposium on Applied Computing
Designing level 3 behavioral RESTful web service interfaces
ACM SIGAPP Applied Computing Review
Web linking-based protocols for guiding RESTful m2m interaction
ICWE'11 Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Current Trends in Web Engineering
From network mining to large scale business networks
Proceedings of the 21st international conference companion on World Wide Web
A finite-state machine approach for modeling and analyzing restful systems
Journal of Web Engineering
What if the web were not RESTful?
Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on RESTful Design
RESTify: from RPCs to RESTful HTTP design
Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on RESTful Design
Today's top "RESTful" services and why they are not restful
WISE'12 Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Web Information Systems Engineering
Data-Fu: a language and an interpreter for interaction with read/write linked data
Proceedings of the 22nd international conference on World Wide Web
Proceedings of the First International Workshop on Software Engineering for Systems-of-Systems
USTO.RE: a private cloud storage software system
ICWE'13 Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Web Engineering
Architectural Styles for Distributed Interoperability
Information Resources Management Journal
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Why don't typical enterprise projects go as smoothly as projects you develop for the Web? Does the REST architectural style really present a viable alternative for building distributed systems and enterprise-class applications? In this insightful book, three SOA experts provide a down-to-earth explanation of REST and demonstrate how you can develop simple and elegant distributed hypermedia systems by applying the Web's guiding principles to common enterprise computing problems. You'll learn techniques for implementing specific Web technologies and patterns to solve the needs of a typical company as it grows from modest beginnings to become a global enterprise. Learn basic Web techniques for application integration Use HTTP and the Webs infrastructure to build scalable, fault-tolerant enterprise applications Discover the Create, Read, Update, Delete (CRUD) pattern for manipulating resources Build RESTful services that use hypermedia to model state transitions and describe business protocols Learn how to make Web-based solutions secure and interoperable Extend integration patterns for event-driven computing with the Atom Syndication Format and implement multi-party interactions in AtomPub Understand how the Semantic Web will impact systems design