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Welcome to SCC 2011
SCC 2011 Highlights - PhotoGallery
Advance Program(7/1/2011):
IEEE-CLOUD-ICWS-SCC-SERVICES-AdvanceProgram.pdf
IEEE CLOUD/ICWS/SCC/SERVICES 2011 Keynotes
Opening Speech: Sorel Reisman, IEEE Computer Society President, 2011
Keynote 1: Data, Data, Data: The Core of Cloud/Services Computing!
(Peter Chen, Fellow of IEEE, ACM
& AAAS, Professor, Louisiana
State University (LSU) & Carnegie-Mellon University
(CMU)Professor,
Louisiana State University & Carnegie-Mellon University)
Keynote 2: Clouds: From Both Sides, Now
(Dan Reed, Fellow of ACM, IEEE &
AAAS, Corporate Vice President, Microsoft)
Keynote 3: Web Services in the Scientific Wilds
(Carole Goble, Fellow of Royal Academy
of Engineering, Professor, University of Manchester, UK)
Research Track: acceptance rate (17%);
full paper (8
pages);
Applications and Experiences Track: acceptance rate (26%); full
paper (8 pages);
Industry Track: accetance rate (19%); full paper (8
pages);
Work-in-Progress Track: 2 pages
Download
a full-page color poster (in November 2010 and December 2010 Issues of
the IEEE Computer
and December
2010 Issues of the Communications
of ACM) for the largest Services
Computing event in 2011!
Services
account for a major
part of
the IT industry today. Companies increasingly like to focus on their
core expertise area and use IT services to address all their peripheral
needs. Services Computing is a new science which aims to study and
better understand the foundations of this highly popular industry. It
covers the science and technology of leveraging computing and
information technology to model, create, operate, and manage business
services. Since 2004, the International Conference on Services
Computing (SCC) has provided a platform for practitioners to present
the latest advances in services science. Like its predecessors, SCC
2011 will contribute in building the pillars of this important science
and shaping the future of Services Computing.
Services
Computing currently
shapes
the thinking of business modeling, business consulting, solution
creation, service delivery, and software architecture design,
development and deployment. The global nature of Services Computing
leads to many opportunities and challenges and creates a new networked
economic structure for supporting different business models. SCC 2011
will help in bridging the gap between business services and information
technology by driving research in technologies such as service-oriented
architecture (SOA), business process integration and management,
service engineering and grid and cloud computing and Web 2.0. SCC
2011 will have the following major tracks: Foundations of Services
Computing, Services Computing Practices and Applications and Business
Aspects of Services Computing.
SCC
2011 will be
co-located with the 7th IEEE 2011 World Congress on Services (SERVICES
2011), the 4th IEEE 2011
International Conference on Cloud
Computing
(CLOUD
2011), the 9th IEEE
2011
International Conference on Web Services (ICWS
2011), and 2nd IEEE Cloud Forum
for Practioners (ICFP
2011) to grow itself.
SCC
2011 is sponsored by the
IEEE
Computer Society Technical
Committee on Services Computing.
SCC
2004
was held in Shanghai, China, September 15-18, 2004 . SCC
2005 was
co-located with ICWS 2005 on July 11-15, 2005 in Orlando, Florida, USA.
SCC
2006 was co-located with ICWS
2006 on September 18-22, 2006 in
Chicago, Illinois, USA. SCC
2007 was co-located with ICWS
2007 on July
9-13, 2007 in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. SCC
2008 was held on July
8-11, 2008, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA. SCC
2009 was held on September
21-25, 2009, Bangalore, India. SCC
2010 was held on July 6-11,
2010, Miami, Florida, USA. The SCC
Proceedings has been
included in EI Compendex.
As
shown in the blue-outlined area, the
International Conference on Services Computing (SCC)
covers
the whole lifecycle of innovation research and enabling technologies,
which includes enterprise modeling, business consulting, solution
creation, services delivery, services orchestrtaion, services
optimization, services management, services marketing, services
delivery and cloud computing, service-oriented architecture (SOA),
business process integration and management, and Web services
technologies and standards.
As
shown in the following landscape of
the IEEE
SERVICES conferences, the business service sectors (vertical industries
and cross-industries) are illustrated in the
dotted area (in orange)
as the major
focus of SERVICES 2011. They are application-specific areas
that apply services computing disciplined approach.
The following two theme conferences continue to explore the deep
knowledge space.
About
IEEE
IEEE
is the world’s largest professional association advancing
innovation
and technological excellence for the benefit of humanity.
IEEE and its
members inspire a global community to innovate for a better tomorrow
through its highly cited publications, conferences, technology
standards, and professional and educational activities. IEEE is the
trusted “voice” for engineering, computing and
technology information
around the globe.
About IEEE
Computer Society
With
nearly 85,000 members, the IEEE
Computer Society (CS) is the
world’s leading
organization of computing professionals. Founded in 1946, and the
largest of the 38 societies of the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers (IEEE), the CS is dedicated to advancing the
theory and application of computer and information-processing
technology.
About the
Technical
Committee on Services Computing
IEEE
Computer Society's Technical Committee on Services Computing (TCSVC) is
a multi-disciplinary group whose purpose is to advance and coordinate
work in the field of Services Computing carried out throughout the IEEE
in scientific, engineering, standard, literary and educational
areas.
Services
Computing has become a cross-discipline that covers the science and
technology of bridging the gap between Business Services and IT
Services. The underneath breaking technology suite includes Web
services and service-oriented architecture (SOA), cloud computing,
business consulting methodology and utilities, business process
modeling, transformation and integration. This scope of Services
Computing covers the whole lifecycle of services innovation research
that includes business componentization, services modeling, services
creation, services realization, services annotation, services
deployment, services discovery, services composition, services
delivery, service-to-service collaboration, services monitoring,
services optimization, as well as services management. The goal of
Services Computing is to enable IT services and computing technology to
perform business services more efficiently and effectively.
Contact
Information
If
you have any questions or queries on SCC 2011, please send email to
scc DOT ieeecs AT gmail.com. Thanks! |