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Patrik Spiess

Researcher at Infineon Technologies

Publications -  28
Citations -  2206

Patrik Spiess is an academic researcher from Infineon Technologies. The author has contributed to research in topics: Wireless sensor network & Service-oriented architecture. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 28 publications receiving 2126 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Interacting with the SOA-Based Internet of Things: Discovery, Query, Selection, and On-Demand Provisioning of Web Services

TL;DR: A process and a suitable system architecture is proposed that enables developers and business process designers to dynamically query, select, and use running instances of real-world services (i.e., services running on physical devices) or even deploy new ones on-demand, all in the context of composite, real- world business applications.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

SOA-Based Integration of the Internet of Things in Enterprise Services

TL;DR: The work presented here proposes an architecture for an effective integration of the Internet of Things in enterprise services that will change the way businesses design, deploy, and use services.
Book ChapterDOI

SOCRADES: a web service based shop floor integration infrastructure

TL;DR: This paper presents SOCRADES, an integration architecture that can serve the requirements of future manufacturing, and provides generic components upon which sophisticated production processes can be modelled.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Integration of SOA-ready networked embedded devices in enterprise systems via a cross-layered web service infrastructure

TL;DR: This work proposes a web service-based integration of enterprise systems with shop-floor activities, using SOA-ready networked embedded devices, and examines the requirements for the integration and derive an appropriate architecture that tries to close the integration gap.
Patent

System monitor for networks of nodes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a system monitor component for a sensor network, which may include a server component that is continuously running and monitoring zero or more networks consisting of (possibly wireless) devices, where each network may be executing a different communications protocol, such as a proprietary, platform-dependent protocol.