QoS-Aware Middleware for Web Services Composition
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Web Service Discovery and Composition using USDL
CEC-EEE '06 Proceedings of the The 8th IEEE International Conference on E-Commerce Technology and The 3rd IEEE International Conference on Enterprise Computing, E-Commerce, and E-Services
Heuristics for QoS-aware Web Service Composition
ICWS '06 Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Web Services
Preference-based selection of highly configurable web services
Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web
Applied Ontology
Is There a Market for Web Services?
Service-Oriented Computing - ICSOC 2007 Workshops
Graph-Based Cloud Service Placement
SCC '10 Proceedings of the 2010 IEEE International Conference on Services Computing
A formal model for semantic web service composition
ISWC'06 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on The Semantic Web
Hi-index | 0.00 |
When we think of Marketplaces we think of places where third parties bring their goods for consumers to find them and transact in some convenient way. When we take this idea to the cloud services space we think of third party services providers that bring their cloud services, and services consumers that expect to match the capabilities that best suit their needs with a service offering. Services as opposed to goods vary in the way they function, in the way that they get activated, and vary in the way they surface the requirements they fulfill. For the consumer the task does not get easier, and to find a solution tailored to their solution may be a trying task. In this paper we explore the landscape of cloud services marketplaces, where we are, a perspective of an architecture, and in particular some of the enablers that would help consumers engage with the marketplace in an easy to use and successful manner.