Notification for shared annotation of digital documents
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Principled design of the modern Web architecture
ACM Transactions on Internet Technology (TOIT)
The many faces of publish/subscribe
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Extending the Representational State Transfer (REST) Architectural Style for Decentralized Systems
Proceedings of the 26th International Conference on Software Engineering
Developing web services choreography standards: the case of REST vs. SOAP
Decision Support Systems - Special issue: Web services and process management
Restful web services
Bite: Workflow Composition for the Web
ICSOC '07 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Service-Oriented Computing
A Comparison of Push and Pull Techniques for AJAX
WSE '07 Proceedings of the 2007 9th IEEE International Workshop on Web Site Evolution
RESTful Web service composition with BPEL for REST
Data & Knowledge Engineering
Using RESTful web-services and cloud computing to create next generation mobile applications
Proceedings of the 24th ACM SIGPLAN conference companion on Object oriented programming systems languages and applications
Server push for web applications via instant messaging
Journal of Web Engineering
Structured service composition
BPM'06 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Business Process Management
Form-Based Web Service Composition for Domain Experts
ACM Transactions on the Web (TWEB)
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Representational State Transfer (REST) as an architectural style for service design has seen substantial uptake in the past years. However, some areas such as Business Process Modeling (BPM) and push services so far have not been addressed in the context of REST principles. In this work, we look at how both BPM and push can be combined so that business processes can be modeled and observed in a RESTful way. Based on this approach, clients can subscribe to be notified when certain states in a business process are reached. Our goal is to design an architecture that brings REST's claims of loose coupling and good scalability to the area of BPM, and still allow process-driven composition and interaction between resources to be modeled.