Service-oriented computing (2003)
| Venue: | Communications of the ACM |
| Citations: | 149 - 5 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Papazoglou03service-orientedcomputing,
author = {Michael P. Papazoglou and Paolo Traverso and Schahram Dustdar and Frank Leymann},
title = {Service-oriented computing},
journal = {Communications of the ACM},
year = {2003},
volume = {46},
pages = {25--28}
}
Years of Citing Articles
OpenURL
Abstract
Service-Oriented Computing (SOC) is a new computing paradigm that utilizes services as the basic constructs to support the development of rapid, low-cost and easy composition of distributed applications even in heterogeneous environments. The visionary promise of Service-Oriented Computing is a world of cooperating services where application components are assembled with little effort into a network of services that can be loosely coupled to create flexible dynamic business processes and agile applications that may span organisations and computing platforms. SOC is being shaped by, and increasingly will help shape, modern society as a whole, especially in the areas of dynamic and on-demand business, health and government services. The subject of Service Oriented Computing is vast and enormously complex, spanning many concepts and technologies that find their origins in diverse disciplines that are woven together in an intricate manner. In addition, there is a need to merge technology with an understanding of business processes and organizational structures, a combination of recognizing an enterprise's pain points and the potential solutions that can be applied to correct them. The material in research spans an immense and diverse spectrum of literature, in origin and in character. As a result research activities at both worldwide as well as at European level are very fragmented. This necessitates that a broader vision







