Information technology management The Application Services Library (ASL) is a public domain standard, which describes a standard for processes within Application Management (the discipline of making and maintaining information systems and applications). ...more on Wikipedia about "Application Services Library"
AS2 (Applicability Statement 2) is a specification about how to transport data ...more on Wikipedia about "AS2"
A blind credential is a token asserting that someone qualifies under some criteria or has some status or right, without revealing "who" that person is — without including their name or address, for instance. It is used in maintaining medical privacy and increasingly for consumer privacy. ...more on Wikipedia about "Blind credential"
Bricks and clicks is a business strategy or business model in e-commerce by which a company attempts to integrate both online and physical presences. It is also known as Click-and-mortar or clicks-and-bricks. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bricks and clicks business model"
Business performance management (BPM) is a set of processes that help organizations optimize business performance. BPM is seen as the next generation of business intelligence (BI). BPM is focused on business processes such as planning and forecasting. It helps businesses discover efficient use of their business units, financial, human, and material resources. ...more on Wikipedia about "Business performance management"
Business transformation is a key executive management initiative that attempts to align the technology initiatives of a company more closely with its business strategy and vision. The degree to which a company can implement new initiatives to support changes in business strategy is known as business agility. Business transformation is achieved through efforts from the business and IT sides of the company. ...more on Wikipedia about "Business transformation"
Business-to-business electronic commerce (B2B) typically takes the form of automated processes between trading partners and is performed in much higher volumes than business-to-consumer (B2C) applications. For example, a company that makes chicken feed would sell it to a chicken farm, another company, rather than directly to consumers. An example of a B2C transaction would be a consumer buying grain-fed chickens at a grocery store. B2B can also encompass marketing activities between businesses, and not just the final transactions that result from marketing. ...more on Wikipedia about "Business-to-business electronic commerce"
Business-to-consumer electronic commerce (B2C) is a form of electronic commerce in which products or services are sold from a firm to a consumer. ...more on Wikipedia about "Business-to-consumer electronic commerce"
Business-to-employee electronic commerce (B2E) uses an intrabusiness network which allows companies to provide products and/or services to their employees. Typically, companies use B2E networks to automate employee-related corporate processes. ...more on Wikipedia about "Business-to-employee electronic commerce"
Business-to-government e-commerce (B2G) networks allow businesses to bid on government RFPs in a reverse auction fashion. ...more on Wikipedia about "Business-to-government electronic commerce"
Computer Aided Facility Management (CAFM) is the support of facilities management by information technology. The supply of information about the facilities is the center of attention. The tools of the CAFM are called CAFM software, CAFM applications or CAFM systems. ...more on Wikipedia about "CAFM"
(CMDB) A database which contains all relevant details of each Configuration Item (CI) and details of the important relationships between CIs. ...more on Wikipedia about "CMDB"
The Control Objectives for Information and related Technology (COBIT) is a framework for information (IT) management risks created by the Information Systems Audit and Control Association (ISACA), and the IT Governance Institute (ITGI). Control Objectives for Information and related Technology, or COBIT, provides managers, auditors, and IT users with a set of generally accepted information technology control objectives to assist them in maximizing the benefits derived through the use of information technology and developing the appropriate IT governance and control in a company. In its 3rd edition, COBIT has 34 high level objectives that cover 318 control objectives categorized in four domains: Planning and Organization, Acquisition and Implementation, Delivery and Support, and Monitoring. ...more on Wikipedia about "COBIT"
Computer security is an ongoing process - 24/7/365 days a year. Developing and maintaining an effective computer policy involves dealing with the causes of security breaches and not the symptoms. ...more on Wikipedia about "Computer security policy"
Integrating computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) with computer-aided design systems produces quicker and more efficient manufacturing processes. This methodology is applied in different manufacturing areas. ...more on Wikipedia about "Computer-aided manufacturing"
Consumer privacy laws and regulations seek to protect any individual from loss of privacy due to failures or limitations of corporate customer privacy measures. They recognize that the damage done by privacy loss is typically not measurable, nor can it be undone, and that commercial organizations have little or no interest in taking unprofitable measures to drastically increase privacy of customers - indeed, their motivation is very often quite the opposite, to share data for commercial advantage, and to fail to officially recognize it as sensitive, so as to avoid legal liability for lapses of security that may occur. ...more on Wikipedia about "Consumer privacy"
(Corporate taxonomy) Hierarchical classification of entities of interest in the activity of an enterprise, organization or administration, used to classify documents, digital assets and other information. Taxonomies can cover virtually any type of physical or conceptual entities (products, processes, knowledge fields, human groups, etc.) at any level of granularity. ...more on Wikipedia about "Corporate taxonomy"
The Croquet Project is an open source technology that can be used to create networked 3D environments for collaborative work. The Squeak-based programming environment serves as a foundation for Croquet. While its primary target is in the educational area it is conceived from the start as a series of shared worlds which can be created in other public and private domains where advanced collaborative software is needed. ...more on Wikipedia about "Croquet project"
Cryptographically Generated Addresses is a method for binding a public signature key to an IPv6 address in the Secure Neighbor Discovery (SEND) protocol. ...more on Wikipedia about "Cryptographically Generated Addresses"
The generally accepted purpose of Customer Relationship Management (CRM) is to enable organizations to better manage their customers through the introduction of reliable systems, processes and procedures for interacting with those customers. ...more on Wikipedia about "Customer relationship management"
Data Farming is the process of using a high performance computer or computing grid to run a simulation thousands or millions of times across a large parameter and value space. The result of Data Farming is a “landscape” of output that can be analyzed for trends, anomalies, and insights in multiple parameter dimensions. ...more on Wikipedia about "Data farming"
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Data mining, also known as knowledge-discovery in databases (KDD), is the practice of automatically searching large stores of data for patterns. To do this, data mining uses computational techniques from statistics, machine learning and pattern recognition. ...more on Wikipedia about "Data mining"
A data warehouse is, primarily, a record of an enterprise's past transactional and operational information, stored in a database designed to favor efficient data analysis and reporting (especially OLAP). Data warehousing is not meant for current "live" data. ...more on Wikipedia about "Data warehouse"
Digital asset management (DAM) refers to the practice and domain of organizing digital files, like images, documents and presentations. The term asset is used to indicate that such files have some sort of intrinsic value that makes it worthwhile to manage them. DAM is related to and can be considered a superset of content management. For more information see also digital asset management systems and content management systems. ...more on Wikipedia about "Digital asset management"
Digital Photo Management (DPM) is an emerging field where anywhere from a few thousand digital photos to millions of digital photos are managed. This is a sub-field of Digital Asset Management or DAM. ...more on Wikipedia about "Digital Photo Management"
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