Here is a one-page printable PDF version of the CFP for this track.
Web Services form the architectural and technological basis for a broad range of today's service-oriented computing systems. Since Web Services first emerged, much has changed from the original goal of platform independent procedure calls via XML: standards have emerged, evolved and become deprecated; numerous architectural and practical lessons have been learned; and Web Services toolkits have evolved and become more sophisticated. Key non-functional requirements are now being addressed in the security, transaction, and reliability domains, while new application areas are emerging, including business process orchestration, grid computing and e-science.
As a result, Web Services technology has become a widely-used solution for intra- and inter-enterprise application integration, including e-commerce. However, improving and better utilising the technology remains an active area of interest both in the research and industrial application arenas. The Web Services track is therefore aimed at researchers, developers, and architects of Web Services who are interested in the next-generation of systems that use these technologies. They are invited to share their experiences, results, and ideas, which may lead to a better understanding of the promise and reality of pervasive, Service-Oriented computing. The WWW2007 Web Services track is therefore soliciting papers which highlight contemporary and novel approaches in Web Services research and practice.
The relevant topics include, but are not restricted to, the following:
Paper formatting requirements are provided on the submissions page.
Track Chair: Paul Watson (University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK)
Deputy Chair: Jim Webber (ThoughtWorks, Australia)
Program Committee: