The Power of it survival Guide for the cio



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Online Resources

.NET – http://msdn.microsoft.com/net/

AES - http://csrc.nist.gov/encryption/aes/

ANSI - http://www.ansi.org

ATM - http://www.atmforum.com

Autonomic Computing – http://www.research.ibm.com/autonomic/

Biometry - http://www.biometrics.org

Bluetooth – http://www.bluetooth.com

Cable Modems – http://www.cable-modems.org

Computer Benchmarking - http://www.specbench.org

COM/DCOM - http://www.microsoft.com/com/default.asp

CORBA - http://www.omg.org

Database Benchmarking – http://www.tpc.org

DBMS - http://www.dbmsmag.com

DSL forum - http://www.dslforum.com

DVD, Mulitread – http://www.osta.org

EIA - http://www.eia.org

Grid Computing - http://www.gridcomputing.com

Hardware - http://www.computerworld.com/hardwaretopics/hardware

HiperLAN 2 – http://www.etsi.org

IEC – http://www.iec.ch

IEEE standards - http://standards.ieee.org

IETF - http://www.ietf.org

Ipv6 - http://www.ipv6.org

IrDA – http://www.irda.org

ISO - http://www.iso.org

ITU – http://www.itu.org

JDBC – http://java.sun.com/products/jdbc/

MacOS - http://www.apple.com/macosx/

Microprocessors – http://www.amd.com

Microprocessors - http://www.intel.com

Network wiring - http://www.network.wiring.com

Networking - http://www.computerworld.com/networkingtopics/networking

ODBC - http://www.microsoft.com/data/odbc/default.htm

Open source implementation of UDDI in java – http://www.juddi.org

Operating Systems - http://www.computerworld.com/softwaretopics/

PDA – http://www.palm.com

SCSI – http://www.scsita.org

Security - http://www.w3.org/Security/

Security - http://www.cert.org/tech_tips/security_tools.html

Smartcards - http://www.scia.org

Storage - http://www.nsic.org

Storage - http://searchstorage.techtarget.com

Storage networking, SNIA – http://www.snia.org

Supercomputing - http://www.top500.org

UMTS – http://www.umtsworld.org

UMTS forum - http://www.umts-forum.org

UNICODE – http://www.unicode.org

UNIX - http://www.eco.utexas.edu/Help/UNIXhelp/

USB – http://www.usb.org

VDSL Alliance – http://www.vdslalliance.com

VDSL Coalition – http://www.vdslcoalition.net

WiFi – http://www.weca.net

WiFi – http://www.wi-fi.org

Wireless LAN Association – http://www.wlana.com

Further Reading

[9] Bourne, S.R., The UNIX System. Addison-Wesley, 1983.


[10] Brockschmidt, K., Inside OLE, Redmond, Washington: Microsoft Press, 1993.
[11] Chappell, D., Understanding ActiveX and OLE, Redmond, Washington: Microsoft Press, 1996.
[12] Covey, S. The Seven habits of highly effective people, Simon & Schuster; 1st edition, 1990.
[13] Date, C.J., An Introduction to Database Systems, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company,1999.
[14] Date, C.J. and Darwen, H., Foundation for Object/Relational Databases: The Third Manifesto, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1998.
[15] Krause, M., Harold F. Tipton, H.F., Information Security Management Handbook, Fourth Edition, Volume I, CRC Press - Auerbach Publications; 4th edition, 1999.
[16] Orfali, R., Harkey, D., Edwards, J., Instant CORBA, Wiley Computer Publishing, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997.
[17] Rosen, K.H., Rosinski, R.R., Faber, J.M., Osborne, UNIX System V, An Introduction. McGraw Hill.
[18] Seifert, R., The Switch Book, John Wiley & Sons, 2000.
[19] Seifert, R., Gigabit Ethernet, Addison Wesley, 1998.
[20] Spurgeon, C.E., Ethernet: The Definitive Guide. O'Reilly and Associates.
[21] Tanenbaum, A.S., Structured Computer Organization. Prentice Hall, 1990.
[22] Tanenbaum, A.S., Computer Networks. Prentice Hall, 1996.
[23] Tanenbaum, A.S., Operating Systems: Design and Implementation. Prentice Hall, 1996.
[24] Umar, A., Object-Oriented Client/Server Internet Environments, Piscataway, New Jersey, 1997.


3

Information Systems



"Information systems will maintain the corporate history, experience and expertise that long-term employees now hold.  The information systems themselves - not the people - can become the stable structure of the organization.  People will be free to come and go, but the value of their experience will be incorporated in the systems that help them and their successors run the business."  
(Applegate et al.)

Information Systems

An Information System is a system of functions concerning the acquisition and transfer of data, information, knowledge, understanding, and wisdom. Information Systems are also called applications. According to the Meta Group a typical large corporation depends on 49 different applications to run its business and spends up to a third of its IT budget getting those applications to communicate with each other.


Within the framework of this book, Information Systems are situated on top of the infrastructure, in support of processes.


Fig. 3.1 Position of Information Systems in the IT stack

Information Systems can further be split down into sub layers as is shown in Fig. 3.2.





Fig. 3.2 – Layers of Information Systems

Production

In the lowest layer we find the personal productivity tools. These Information Systems are nothing more than a way to gain access to data so, in a way, they can be considered as just specialized user interfaces. They can be specialized (e.g., word processor) or generic (e.g., browser).



Collaboration

The tools in this layer are designed to improve group productivity; this is why they are also called groupware. These Information Systems are used to communicate, cooperate, solve problems, and negotiate. They systematically rely on a network. Typical Information Systems are email, group calendars, newsgroups, chatting and videoconferencing.



Processes

The purpose of these layers is to generate added value for the organization through the combination of information. In these layers we find the direct support to the Business Processes. The Information Systems in the lower layer consist of input, verification and calculation programs (creation, modification and deletion of information on a unitary basis) while the upper layer will aggregate these data (sorted lists, totals, averages...).



Tactics

The purpose of the systems in this layer is to provide the Management with quantitative information about the Business Processes. This information can be used to compare the organization with others; it can be of an analytical nature or be used to apply corrections to internal Business Processes. This layer supports the short-term change processes.



Strategy

The Information Systems in this layer aim to provide strategic information to the Management. They support the long-term change processes.



Operational and Informational Systems

The lower three layers are managing operations on individual entities (creation, modification and deletion of objects, files, records, entities...); they are oriented towards transaction processing. The upper three layers are managing groups of entities; they are oriented towards analytical processing. The layers in the lower part of the model are directed towards the daily operations of the organization, they are called Operational Systems. The upper layers are supporting the change processes and are called Informational Systems, Decision Support Systems (DSSs) or Business Intelligence (BI) systems.



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