Jini Specification
Service Location Protocol: Automatic Discovery of IP Network Services
IEEE Internet Computing
WOSP '02 Proceedings of the 3rd international workshop on Software and performance
The Ubiquitous Provisioning of Internet Services to Portable Devices
IEEE Pervasive Computing
Towards High-Precision Service Retrieval
ISWC '02 Proceedings of the First International Semantic Web Conference on The Semantic Web
Discovering Services: Towards High-Precision Service Retrieval
CAiSE '02/ WES '02 Revised Papers from the International Workshop on Web Services, E-Business, and the Semantic Web
Dynamic Binding in Mobile Applications: A Middleware Approach
IEEE Internet Computing
Toward High-Precision Service Retrieval
IEEE Internet Computing
Understanding failure response in service discovery systems
Journal of Systems and Software
Simple and effective defense against evil twin access points
WiSec '08 Proceedings of the first ACM conference on Wireless network security
An Efficient Device Authentication Protocol Using Bioinformatic
Computational Intelligence and Security
P2P Networking and Applications
P2P Networking and Applications
Service integration with UPnP agent for an ubiquitous home environment
Information Systems Frontiers
EUC'07 Proceedings of the 2007 international conference on Embedded and ubiquitous computing
Petri nets for the verification of ubiquitous systems with transient secure association
UIC'07 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Ubiquitous Intelligence and Computing
KES'12 Proceedings of the 16th international conference on Knowledge Engineering, Machine Learning and Lattice Computing with Applications
Recomposing an ontological representation of services to reduce its size
International Journal of Knowledge-based and Intelligent Engineering Systems - Selected papers of KES2012-Part 1 of 2
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Service advertisement and discovery technologies enable device cooperation and reduce configuration hassles, a necessity in increasingly mobile computing environments. This article surveys five competing but similar “service discovery suites” and looks at efforts to bridge the technologies. Although most of these service discovery suites promise similar functionality (namely, reduced configuration hassles, improved device cooperation, and automated discovery of required services) they come at the problem from different philosophical and technical approaches. Since none of these technologies is a superset of the others and none is mature enough to dominate the market, interoperation among them will require bridging mechanisms. The survey concludes with a review of some developments in this area