This Web site contains all information related to the Third International Workshop on Web APIs and Services Mashups (Mashups'09) at OOPSLA 2009 in Orlando, Florida.
Mashups'09 is the 3rd International Workshop on Web APIs and Services Mashups – end-user-oriented compositions of Web APIs, Web content and Web data sources. The workshop explores programming models (languages, frameworks, platforms) for the composition of Web-accessible services and data of all kinds and architectural styles (REST, Atom, RSS, AtomPub, and SOAP/WSDL), quality of service for mashups (such as performance, reliability, and security), and social and economic factors in the creation, acceptance, and sustainability of services mashups (including service marketplaces and intermediaries and business models). The Mashups'09 workshop aims to bring together researchers and practitioners (mashup developers, mashup technology providers and experts, end-users, social networking and economics researchers) with the broader OOPSLA community.
The Web is now programmable. Part of this programmability comes from the many Web APIs available from Web sites and services. An interesting consequence of these APIs is the ability to combine the resulting data and process into new data and processes achieving higher-level value than originally exposed by the initial APIs.
A classic example is to combine mapping APIs (e.g., Google Maps) and the Atom data APIs from Craigslist or the REST API from Eventful database to have a new service that displays listing or events on the map. These resulting new Web applications, or mashups, add new value to the initial Web APIs that individually they would not be able to do alone.
While mashups have taken off and 1000s of mashups are currently widely available for various purposes, there remains various challenges and opportunities, that if addressed would make mashups even more widely available and accessible on the Web. A few of these challenges are:
In this third installment of the International Mashups Workshop we will solicit contributions addressing these issues. We plan to continue the tradition of the two previous Mashups workshops (2007 in Vienna and 2008 in Sydney) of not only selecting a broad range of papers in the space but also getting keynote speakers from leading industry groups that are currently offering mashups tools and platforms for wide-consumptions and availability.