Australian W3C Office The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is a non-for-profit, vendor-independent international Web standards organisation that develops interoperable technologies (specifications, guidelines, software, and tools) to lead the Web to its full potential. W3C is a forum for information, commerce, communication, and collective understanding.
You are invited to a free W3C workshop on the W3C’s XForms and Semantic Web Services Activities to be held at:
Theatrette (enter from James Street)
Art Gallery of Western Australia
James Street Mall, Perth WA 6000 (map)
Wednesday, 30 June 2004
10am to 11am– Semantic Web Services
Presenter: Dr Jane Hunter
Web services are transforming the Internet from a collection of information
into a distributed computational device. They enable software applications
to be distributed, accessed and executed via the Web. But current web service
technologies (UDDI, WSDL, and SOAP) provide limited support for automating
service discovery, service
configuration and service composition (i.e., realizing complex workflows
with Web services). In order to fully employ the potential of web services,
they need to be appropriately described. Semantic Web Services combines
Semantic Web technology with Web Service technology to enable automated
and dynamic Web service discovery, execution and composition through new
technologies such as OWL-S (Ontology Web
Language for Services).
This presentation will provide an overview of the Semantic Web Services vision, describe recent technological developments (such as OWL-S), and demonstrate potential applications of Semantic Web services through a number of case studies.
W3C Semantic Web Services Interest Group: http://www.w3.org/2002/ws/swsig/
Bio: Dr Jane Hunter is a Distinguished Research Fellow at the Distributed Systems Technology (DSTC) Cooperative Research Centre, at the University of Queensland. She is also Project Leader of DSTC's MAENAD (Multimedia Access for Enterprises across Networks And Domains) project which is developing indexing, archival, discovery, analysis, integration, management and preservation tools and services to enable knowledge management, mining and capture within the educational, cultural and scientific domains. She is currently the liaison between MPEG (Moving Pictures Experts Group) and W3C, a member of the Dublin Core Advisory Board and the W3C Web Ontology Language Working group and on the Editorial board of Elsevier's Journal of Web Semantics.
11am to 12noon - New Generation of Web Forms: experience with
XForms trials
Presenter: Dr Hoylen Sue
Electronic forms on the Web provide user interface to data and services
offered on the Web. By using Web forms users can interact with the enterprise
applications and back-end systems linked to these forms. Web applications,
e-government and e-commerce solutions have sparked the demand for better
Web forms – supporting richer and more dynamic interactions than what
is possible with existing HTML forms.
XForms is new World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) specification that provides
more intelligent support for Web forms to meet this demand. This is achieved
by separating the data model of the form from their presentation format.
Both the data and presentation models are described using XML. This design
enables more efficient integration with backend systems and facilitates
efficient exchange of XML data. The separation also makes it possible to
have multiple presentation formats for the same data model, which enables
repurposing, reuse and accessibility across different types of devices.
This presentation:
W3C XForms homepage: http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/Forms/
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