International Semantic Web Working Symposium
SWWS
sponsored by the
National Science Foundation, Information and Data Management
Program
Stanford University, California, USA
July 30 - August 1, 2001
Report
Web Services and Web Applications Track
Sheila McIlraith (Stanford University) and Jim Hendler (DARPA)
The Track of SWWS was facilitated by Sheila McIlraith (Stanford University)
and Jim Hendler (DARPA). It was comprised of ten paper presentations and an invited talk. Participants included
academics, researchers, students, and IT professionals from startup companies, large companies and the government.
The track was organized so as to allow time for not just presentations, but also for interaction between attendees
and presenters and for open discussion among the participants. The track, as the name implies, included two main
themes: the application of semantic web technologies on the web and the emerging area of web services.
Web Applications
The papers relating to applications of the semantic web showed that real applications are starting to emerge, that
demonstrate the use of this new technology and the exciting things that can be done. The applications presented
include:
Participants were pleased to see this evidence that the research ideas in the semantic web are starting to transition
to real applications. Discussion focused on the commercialization aspects of some of these applications, on the
commonalities and differences between the approaches, and on the efficacy of semantic markup for use in deployable
applications.
Several issues emerged as critical needs to be addressed in moving applications from research to practice. Two
in particular were felt to be critical for the future success of these systems:
Web Services
Three papers and an invited talk focused on web services, with a particular emphasis on the interaction of Semantic
Web and Web Services. Paper topics included a discussion of the proposed DAML-S ontology-based services language,
and on how to advertise and search for web services. In addition, James Snell from the Emerging Technologies group
at IBM presented an invited talk on the emerging "acronym hell" of web servics. He discussed many of
the emerging specs, particularly UDDI, SOAP and WSDL. This was followed by a lively discussion of web services
and the directions this work is taking in industrial practice.
Based on the presentations and discussions, it became clear that web services is emerging as an important application
for the Semantic Web, and a hot-bed of activity in industry -- web services are hot. Currently, however, there
is little or no "semantic" web in the web services world, but participants felt this was sure to follow.
Industry is currently focusing on the development of technology and infrastructure languages and tools to support
web services. This includes a welter of approaches including service advertisement languages and registries (WSDL,
UDDI), service protocols (SOAP), workflow description languages (WSFL, XLANG) and software frameworks (.Net, WebSphere,
and eSpeak). A number of large software/hardware vendors are focused heavily on web services (e.g. Microsoft, IBM,
Sun and HP).
It was also clear that there was a lot of academic work in this area, with a number of projects being inherently
interdisciplinary with participants from AI, networking, databases, business schools and other groups. Support
for this research is coming from both the US government (DARPA) and the EU IST program.
A number of issues arose from the discussions in this session. These include some shared concerns with the applications
track with respect to languages, tools and infrastructure as described above, and some particular issues including:
Conclusion
Participants in this session were able to see that the semantic web is more than simply some sort of academic foolishness
or rewarmed AI vision. The applications showed real technology and tools are being built in the Semantic web community,
and that there is a lot of interest in these technologies on the part of industry and government. The web services
track showed one area where there is tremendous industrial interest and where semantic web technology could be
an important part of the work.
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