The SENSORIA Summer School (SENSUS 2009) will give attendees a comprehensive overview on service engineering methods and tools developed within the SENSORIA EU FP6 project. The Summer School demonstrates a model-driven approach for the entire development cycle of service-oriented applications and infrastructures including the design, formal analysis, deployment and re-engineering of services.
The summer school will present visual modeling techniques, behavioral and performance analysis methods, reconfigurable service infrastructures, deployment
and re-engineering techniques developed within the project. It will also provide
some insight into state-of-the-art industrial techniques in the rapidly developing
SOA field.
The School is hosted in Keszthely, which is a charming town by Lake Balaton. It is organised by the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, in collaboration with SENSORIA partners (http://www.sensoria-ist.eu/).
Lecturers:
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- Introduction to model-driven development of service-oriented applications in SENSORIA
- Péter Balogh (IBM Hungary): Industrial infrastructures for SOA
- Philip Mayer (LMU): The SENSORIA Development Environment
- Nora Koch (LMU/Cirquent): Service Modeling with UML4SOA
- Howard Foster (LSS/Imperial College): Behaviour Analysis of Service Compositions
- Stephen Gilmore (Univ. Edinburgh): Model-based performance analysis
- Arun Mukhija and David Rosenblum (LSS/UCL): Reconfigurable service infrastructures
- Dániel Varró (TU Budapest): Service deployment by model transformations
- Reiko Heckel and Carlos Matos (Univ. Leicester): Reverse engineering of services
- Martin Wirsing (LMU, project coordinator): SENSORIA project summary
Important dates:
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Early registration deadline: 30 April, 2009
Grant application deadline: 30 April, 2009
Notification of grant decisions: 8 May, 2009
Late registration deadline: 30 May, 2009
SENSORIA Summer School: 29 June - 3 July, 2009
Grants:
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Grants will be available for a limited number of students. Please note that
available funding mostly enables to reduce registration fees, while travel
expenses can be compensated in exceptional cases.
You can apply for grants during (early) registration.