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Web services considered harmful?
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Source International World Wide Web Conference archive
Special interest tracks and posters of the 14th international conference on World Wide Web table of contents
Chiba, Japan
PANEL SESSION: Panels table of contents
Pages: 800 - 800  
Year of Publication: 2005
ISBN:1-59593-051-5
Authors
Rohit Khare  CommerceNet Labs
Jeff Barr  Amazon Web Services
Mark Baker  Developer's Day Chair
Adam Bosworth  Google
Tim Bray  Sun Microsystems
Jeffery McManus  eBay Web Services
Sponsor
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

It has been estimated that all of the Web Services specifications and proposals ("WS-*") weigh in at several thousand pages by now. At the same time, their predecessor technologies such as XML-RPC have developed alongside other "grassroots" technologies like RSS. This debate has arguably even risen to the architectural level, contrasting "service-oriented architectures" with REST-based architectural styles. Unfortunately, the multiple overlapping specifications, standards bodies, and vendor strategies tend to obscure the very real successes of providing machine-automatable services over the Web today. This panel asks: Are current community processes for developing, debating, and adopting Web Services are helping or hindering the adoption of Web Services technology? URL: <http://labs.commerce.net/wiki/images/1/19/CN-TR-04-05.pdf.

Collaborative Colleagues:
Rohit Khare: colleagues
Jeff Barr: colleagues
Mark Baker: colleagues
Adam Bosworth: colleagues
Tim Bray: colleagues
Jeffery McManus: colleagues