IEEE Internet Computing
IEEE Internet Computing
Web Services Are Not Distributed Objects
IEEE Internet Computing
IEEE Internet Computing
IEEE Internet Computing
IEEE Internet Computing
Composing aggregate web services in BPEL
Proceedings of the 44th annual Southeast regional conference
Modeling process-driven and service-oriented architectures using patterns and pattern primitives
ACM Transactions on the Web (TWEB)
An ECA-based framework for decentralized coordination of ubiquitous web services
Information and Software Technology
Software frameworks for information systems integration based on web services
Proceedings of the 2008 ACM symposium on Applied computing
A Hybrid Architecture for E-Procurement
ICCCI '09 Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Computational Collective Intelligence. Semantic Web, Social Networks and Multiagent Systems
A web service-based brokering service for e-procurement in supply chains
GPC'07 Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Advances in grid and pervasive computing
Centralized-star architecture of web service node as integration solution in complex organization
Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Information Integration and Web-based Applications & Services
HYDRA: a middleware-oriented integrated architecture for e-procurement in supply chains
Transactions on computational collective intelligence I
Computers and Electronics in Agriculture
A practice in facilitating service-oriented inter-enterprise application integration
TES'04 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Technologies for E-Services
Research on innovative web information system based on grid environment
APWeb'06 Proceedings of the 2006 international conference on Advanced Web and Network Technologies, and Applications
Event-based peer-to-peer process enactment for ubiquitous web service devices
BPM'06 Proceedings of the 2006 international conference on Business Process Management Workshops
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Middleware's success and proliferation has recreated驴at a higher level驴the very problem it was designed to address. Rather than having to deal with multiple different OSs, todayýs distributed-application developers face multiple middleware approaches. Indeed, middleware does provide the promised abstractions, but different approaches provide different types of abstractions. For example, those found in message-queuing systems are quite different from the ones in distributed object systems.