10201 Executive Summary and Manifesto -- Event Processing
M. Chandy, O. Etzion, und R. von Ammon. Event Processing, 10201, Dagstuhl, Germany, Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum fuer Informatik, Germany, (2011)
Zusammenfassung
The second Dagstuhl seminar on event processing took place in May 2010. This five-day meeting was oriented to work toward a comprehensive document that would explain event processing and how it relates to other technologies and suggest future work in terms of standards, challenges, and shorter-term research projects. The 45 participants came from academia and industry, some of them out of the event processing field. The teams continued the work after the conference and have summarized their findings in this document. The chapters were written by different teams and then edited for consistency.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Chandy2011
%A Chandy, Mani K.
%A Etzion, Opher
%A von Ammon, Rainer
%B Event Processing
%C Dagstuhl, Germany
%D 2011
%E Chandy, K. Mani
%E Etzion, Opher
%E von Ammon, Rainer
%I Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum fuer Informatik, Germany
%K CEP manifesto events iCEP 2011 PLAY-Project Dagstuhl
%N 10201
%T 10201 Executive Summary and Manifesto -- Event Processing
%U http://drops.dagstuhl.de/opus/volltexte/2011/2985
%X The second Dagstuhl seminar on event processing took place in May 2010. This five-day meeting was oriented to work toward a comprehensive document that would explain event processing and how it relates to other technologies and suggest future work in terms of standards, challenges, and shorter-term research projects. The 45 participants came from academia and industry, some of them out of the event processing field. The teams continued the work after the conference and have summarized their findings in this document. The chapters were written by different teams and then edited for consistency.
%Z Keywords: Event Processing
@inproceedings{Chandy2011,
abstract = {The second Dagstuhl seminar on event processing took place in May 2010. This five-day meeting was oriented to work toward a comprehensive document that would explain event processing and how it relates to other technologies and suggest future work in terms of standards, challenges, and shorter-term research projects. The 45 participants came from academia and industry, some of them out of the event processing field. The teams continued the work after the conference and have summarized their findings in this document. The chapters were written by different teams and then edited for consistency.},
added-at = {2011-03-04T14:26:20.000+0100},
address = {Dagstuhl, Germany},
annote = {Keywords: Event Processing},
author = {Chandy, Mani K. and Etzion, Opher and von Ammon, Rainer},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/203f7f731ca8ce87b21abd1a9cad4339f/atrus},
booktitle = {Event Processing},
editor = {Chandy, K. Mani and Etzion, Opher and von Ammon, Rainer},
interhash = {1428013817edccf2957a8fd7ada735cb},
intrahash = {03f7f731ca8ce87b21abd1a9cad4339f},
issn = {1862-4405},
keywords = {CEP manifesto events iCEP 2011 PLAY-Project Dagstuhl},
number = 10201,
publisher = {Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum fuer Informatik, Germany},
series = {Dagstuhl Seminar Proceedings},
timestamp = {2011-04-12T20:31:01.000+0200},
title = {{10201 Executive Summary and Manifesto -- Event Processing}},
url = {http://drops.dagstuhl.de/opus/volltexte/2011/2985},
year = 2011
}