Internet-based Workflow Management: Toward a Semantic Web (Wiley Series on Parallel and Distributed Computing)
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Product Description
Internet–based business transactions can be broken down into a series of independent steps. This workflow often involves tools from an array of fields, such as network modeling, scheduling, distributed systems, artificial intelligence, software agents, and Java. This book serves as a single, comprehensive resource for IT practitioners and students that covers all these vital aspects of workflow management.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2955463 in Books
- Published on: 2002-04-25
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 626 pages
Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
Today, an ever–expanding set of human activities, ranging from business processes to healthcare to education and research, is dependent upon the Internet. Most processes involve a workflow, the coordinated execution of multiple activities. In a given application, once the key stages of the workflow have been isolated, an infrastructure to coordinate the handling of individual cases is necessary.
Internet–Based Workflow Management shows how to understand, develop, and use societal services for process coordination in an information grid with a rich set of hardware and software resources. In such a semantic web, individual services offered by autonomous service providers can be composed to perform the complex tasks involved in emerging new applications.
The book is designed to be accessible to IT practitioners and researchers as well as to those without formal training in computer science. Businesspeople, scientists, engineers, or anyone else involved in the development of Internet–centric applications will find the book an invaluable resource. The coverage includes:
∗ Workflow management
∗ Distributed systems
∗ Modeling of distributed systems and workflows
∗ Networking
∗ Quality of service
∗ Open systems
∗ Software agents
∗ Knowledge management
∗ Planning
In the final chapter of the book, Dan Marinescu brings together all these elements in a case study that shows the step–by–step development of middleware for process coordination. This middleware is available under an open source license at www.wiley.com.
About the Author
DAN C. MARINESCU joined the Computer Science Department at the University of Central Florida in August 2001. Since 1984 he has been Associate and then Full Professor with the Computer Sciences Department at Purdue University, in West Lafayette, Indiana. He is conducting research in parallel and distributed systems, computational biology, ubiquitous computing and Petri nets and has published more than 130 papers in journals and refereed conference proceedings in these areas.

