scholarly journals Providing web services to mobile users: the architecture design of an m-service portal

2005 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Minder Chen ◽  
Dongsong Zhang ◽  
Lina Zhou
Author(s):  
John A. MacDonald ◽  
Kalid Elmufti ◽  
Dasun Weerasinghe ◽  
M. Rajarajan ◽  
Veselin Rakocevic ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Valérie Monfort ◽  
Sihem Cherif ◽  
Rym Chaabani

Many companies include in their Information Systems (IS) several communicating heterogeneous middleware according to their technical needs. The need is the same when IS require the use of context aware platforms for different aims. Moreover, users may be mobile and would like receiving and send services with their PDAs that emphasize further the need to Android based human man interface. In this chapter, the authors show how they extend Android to make it adaptable and interoperable. They also present how we communicate between different heterogeneous context-aware platforms as WComp and OpenORB by using Android and Web Services. The usefulness of the proposed approach is demonstrated through a concrete case study.


Author(s):  
Elarbi Badidi ◽  
Larbi Esmahi

In the last few years, a rising proportion of the workforce is becoming more and more mobile, meaning that organizations must consider this new trend in their corporate and IT strategies. The expectation of employees now is that they can retain access to their corporate services as they move to new locations, using various kinds of handheld devices. This chapter describes our proposed broker-based system for Web services provisioning to mobile users with quality of service (QoS) requirements. It describes a set of brokers collaborating to provide tailored services to mobile users while they move from one site to another in their corporate and partners’ networks. Access to QoS-enabled Web services complies with the policies of the user‘s home site. Policies are a key component of the system as they are involved at different levels: authorization, QoS specification, QoS service monitoring, and service selection.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Festim Halili ◽  
Erenis Ramadani

The interest on Web services has been growing rapidly in these couple of years since their start of use. A web service would be described as a method for exchanging/communicating information between devices over a network. Often, when deciding which service would fit on the architecture design to develop a product, then the question rises which service to use and when?SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol) and REST (Representational State Transfer) are the two most used protocols to exchange messages, so choosing one over the other has its own advantages and disadvantages. In this paper we have addressed the differences and best practices when to use one over the other.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-34
Author(s):  
Bobby Suryajaya

SKK Migas plans to apply end-to-end security based on Web Services Security (WS-Security) for Sistem Operasi Terpadu (SOT). However, there are no prototype or simulation results that can support the plan that has already been communicated to many parties. This paper proposes an experiment that performs PRODML data transfer using WS-Security by altering the WSDL to include encryption and digital signature. The experiment utilizes SoapUI, and successfully loaded PRODML WSDL that had been altered with WSP-Policy based on X.509 to transfer a SOAP message.


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