Service-Oriented Computing is a paradigm that uses services as building
blocks for building distributed applications. The primary motivation for
orchestrating services in the cloud used to be distributed business processes,
which drove the standardization of the Business Process Execution Language
(BPEL) and its central notion that a service is a business process. In recent
years, there has been a transition towards other motivations for orchestrating
services in the cloud, {\em e.g.}, XaaS, RMAD. Although it is theoretically
possible to make all of those services into WSDL/SOAP services, it would be too
complicated and costly for industry adoption. Therefore, the central notion
that a service is a business process is too restrictive. Instead, we view a
service as a technology neutral, loosely coupled, location transparent
procedure. With these ideas in mind, we introduce a new approach to services
orchestration: Ozy, a general orchestration container. We define this new
approach in terms of existing technology, and we show that the Ozy container
relaxes many traditional constraints and allows for simpler, more feature-rich
applications.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, accepted at IEEE Intl Conf. on Web Services
(ICWS), San Francisco, CA, 201