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Developing Semantic Web Services

March 9, 2010 by BPELworld.com 

  • ISBN13: 9781568812120
  • Condition: USED – VERY GOOD
  • Notes:

Product Description
The inventor of the World Wide Web, Tim Berners-Lee, is also the originator of the next generation Web architecture, the Semantic Web. Currently, his World Wide Web consortium (W3C) team works to develop, extend, and standardize the Web’s markup languages and tools. The objective of the Semantic Web Architecture is to provide a knowledge representation of linked data in order to allow machine processing on a global scale. The W3C has developed a new generation of open standard markup languages which are now poised to unleash the power, flexibility, and above all—logic—of the next generation Web, as well as open the door to the next generation of Web Services.

There are many ways in which the two areas of Web Services and the Semantic Web could interact to lead to the further development of Semantic Web Services. Berners-Lee has suggested that both of these technologies would benefit from integration that would combine the Semantic Web’s meaningful content with Web Services’ business logic. Areas such as UDDI and WSDL are ideally suited to be implemented using Semantic Web technology. In addition, SOAP could use RDF payloads, remote RDF query and updates, and interact with Semantic Web business rules engines, thereby laying the foundation for Semantic Web Services.

This book presents the complete Language Pyramid of Web markup languages, including Resource Description Framework (RDF), Web Ontology Language (OWL) and OWL-Services (OWL-S) along with examples and software demos. The source code for the “Semantic Web Author,” an Integrated Development Environment for Semantic Markup Languages is included on CD-ROM with the book.

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Comments

5 Responses to “Developing Semantic Web Services”

  1. Blueandwhitestripes on March 9th, 2010 5:09 pm

    Lured into its supposed merits, as espoused by the then single review on here, I looked forward to using this book in my work. Disappointment, however, was not far away. The book is wafflesome, and vacuous. How it claims to be useful for developers is mystifying — an unjustified title if ever there was one. It is a useless reference source for this purpose. It is barely useful as a source of information for managers or analysts either. You’ve got to get past the waffle first, remember! Poor, poor, poor.
    Rating: 1 / 5

  2. Developer on March 9th, 2010 5:45 pm

    The book is a well compiled resource not only for developers but also in terms of teaching semantic web services. For research and development on semantic web and web services to gain further momentum, the underlying principles need to be accessible to both developers and academics. The book achieves this objective satisfactorily.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. Midwest Book Review on March 9th, 2010 6:08 pm

    The collaborative work of technology innovator H. Peter Alesso and research engineer Craig Smith, Developing Semantic Web Services presents the complete Language Pyramid of Web markup languages, including Resource Description Framework (RDF), Web Ontology Language (OWL) and OWL-Services (OWL-S), along with numerous examples and software demos. Developing Semantic Web Services also describes the semantic software development tools including design and analysis methodologies, parsers, validators, editors, development environments, and inference engines. Additionally, the source code for the “Semantic Web Author”, an Integrated Development Environment for Semantic Markup Languages, is included on an accompanying CD-ROM. Reflecting their expertise arising from their many years of extended research experience at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, the co-authors have succeed in producing a seminal, essential, professional level instruction manual and reference work.

    Rating: 5 / 5

  4. W Boudville on March 9th, 2010 8:23 pm

    The text is about what might sit above XML, in the making of a Semantic Web. It explains XML and several of its numerous subsets, like XPath, XPointer, XSLT and XLink. The union of all these is powerful and has led to XML being the most common format for data interchange on the Web.

    But the problem is that XML does not imbue meaning to that data. Just structure. This needs other efforts. Specifically, RDF and OWL. You get a detailed look at their current abilities. A hope in this field is that those languages will suffice to make Semantic Web services.

    Indeed, RDF is shown to have nice constructs, each with a “sentence” of subject, predicate and object. This rule encoding can be (and is) expressed in XML, and it can operate on XML data, given an RDF engine.

    Exciting possibilities for revving up the Web. Maybe. The question as to whether they are adequate is still open.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  5. Anthony Gonzales on March 9th, 2010 8:26 pm

    This book is a comprehensive text for markup languages in general and an excellent primer on XML,RDF,OWL AND OWL-Services. It includes many illustrative examples that are followed through from chapter to chapter to provide a common thread as you move up the language pyramid. The presentation of OWL-Services includes an extensive Enterprise example that covers several chapters and is analyzed in detail. While the book is not a cookbook for a wide variety of applications it does cover semantic search technology and semantic group-ware.

    The companion CD-ROM provides C# source code for an integrated development tool for XML, RDF and OWL that includes parsing and validation capability and is readily expandable.
    Rating: 5 / 5

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