Service identification requirements for enteprise information systems

Authors: Sofela, O., De Vrieze, P. and Xu, L.

Journal: SKIMA 2016 - 2016 10th International Conference on Software, Knowledge, Information Management and Applications

Pages: 454-459

DOI: 10.1109/SKIMA.2016.7916265

Abstract:

Identifying services is one of the most important step in developing service-oriented business systems. Existing service identification methods still have some shortcomings, e.g. unrepeatable approach, inapplicable to all enterprise information systems and unadaptable to business factor change. Some approaches focus on fixed cases or certain types of organizations neglecting the change of involvement and operation of the enterprise systems, which have limited value to apply to a broad range of real-life business cases In this paper, we investigate requirements of service identification from different types of information systems, from single systems to collaborative systems, from closed systems to open systems. The research is important for providing a solid foundation for further identifying services for developing different service-oriented systems.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/30021/

Source: Scopus

Service Identification Requirements for Enteprise Information Systems

Authors: Sofela, O., de Vrieze, P. and Xu, L.

Journal: PROCEEDINGS OF 2016 10TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SOFTWARE, KNOWLEDGE, INFORMATION MANAGEMENT & APPLICATIONS (SKIMA)

Pages: 454-459

ISSN: 2373-082X

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/30021/

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

Service identification requirements for enterprise information systems

Authors: Sofela, O., De Vrieze, P. and Xu, L.

Editors: Cang, S. and Wang, Y.

Conference: SKIMA 2016: 10th International Conference on Software, Knowledge, Information Management and Applications

Dates: 15-17 December 2016

Pages: 454-459

Publisher: SKIMA

ISBN: 978-1-5090-3298-3

Abstract:

Identifying services is one of the most important step in developing service-oriented business systems. Existing service identification methods still have some shortcomings, e.g. unrepeatable approach, inapplicable to all enterprise information systems and unadaptable to business factor change. Some approaches focus on fixed cases or certain types of organizations neglecting the change of involvement and operation of the enterprise systems, which have limited value to apply to a broad range of real-life business cases In this paper, we investigate requirements of service identification from different types of information systems, from single systems to collaborative systems, from closed systems to open systems. The research is important for providing a solid foundation for further identifying services for developing different service-oriented systems

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/30021/

Source: Manual

Preferred by: Paul de Vrieze

Service identification requirements for enterprise information systems

Authors: Sofela, O., de Vrieze, P.T. and Xu, L.

Editors: Cang, S. and Wang, Y.

Conference: SKIMA 2016: 10th International Conference on Software, Knowledge, Information Management & Applications

Pages: 454-459

Publisher: SKIMA

ISBN: 978-1-5090-3298-3

Abstract:

Identifying services is one of the most important step in developing service-oriented business systems. Existing service identification methods still have some shortcomings, e.g. unrepeatable approach, inapplicable to all enterprise information systems and unadaptable to business factor change. Some approaches focus on fixed cases or certain types of organizations neglecting the change of involvement and operation of the enterprise systems, which have limited value to apply to a broad range of real-life business cases In this paper, we investigate requirements of service identification from different types of information systems, from single systems to collaborative systems, from closed systems to open systems. The research is important for providing a solid foundation for further identifying services for developing different service-oriented systems

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/30021/

Source: BURO EPrints