200 likes | 302 Views
0. Chapter 1. System Concepts. 0. What is a System?. Set of inter-related components with a clearly defined boundary Working together to achieve objectives. 0. Simple Example. Heating System Objective : Control the temperature inside a building Components : Furnace Thermostat
E N D
0 Chapter 1 System Concepts
0 What is a System? • Set of inter-related components with a clearly defined boundary • Working together to achieve objectives
0 Simple Example Heating System • Objective: Control the temperature inside a building • Components: • Furnace • Thermostat • Building
0 General Components • Every system has some form of • Input, and • Output • Processing is often required to transform the input to output • Systems have some point of Control • Systems often provide Feedback
0 Simple Example Heating System • Input: Fuel Source, Desired Temperature, Actual Temperature • Processing: If Actual Temp. < Desired then burn fuel to produce heat • Output: Heat or no heat (depending on Input)
0 Simple Example Q: In a heating system, what could trigger the furnace to turn on? Q: In a heating system, what could trigger the furnace to turn off?
0 Feedback Feedback is data about the performance of a system. Example: Data about sales performance is feedback to a sales manager In a heating system, feedback would be the change +/- of the actual temperature.
0 Control • Control involves monitoring and evaluating the feedback to determine whether the system is achieving its goals. • Heating System Example: • Goal: keep the building at 65 degrees • Feedback: Temp falls to 62. • Control: Turn on or turn up the furnace.
0 Control & Feedback • A thermostat is a control unit of a heating system. • Makes control decisions based on feedback. • Good systems have self-monitoring control built into them (Cybernetic). • Imagine trying to regulate the temperature in a room without a thermostat.
0 Important Terminology • Cybernetic System • Sub-system • Open System • Adaptive System • System Parameter • System Variable
0 Business Systems An Information System helps process Input into Output but it is also the backbone for directing feedback to Management (Control)
These are the 5 components of an IS 0 Information System Components In some sense providing Feedback is the primary objective of all these components and activities These are IS Activities
0 IS Resources and Products
0 IS Activities
Data raw facts no context just numbers and text Information data with context processed data value-added to data summarized organized analyzed 0 Data vs. Information
Data vs. Information • Data: 51006 • Information: • 5/10/06 The date of you final exam. • $51,006 The average starting salary of an accounting major. • 51006 Zip code of Battle Creek Indiana.
Data vs. Information Information Data • 6.34 • 6.45 • 6.39 • 6.62 • 6.57 • 6.64 • 6.71 • 6.82 • 7.12 • 7.06
Lufthansa Case pp 23 • Questions: • What type of Information System is described? (TSP, PCS, ECS, MIS, DSS, EIS?) • What are the components: People, Hardware, Software, Networks, Data?
Luftansa Case • Q: Are Lufthansa’s challenges similar to those being experienced by other businesses? • Provide a mobile workforce • Distribute training activities during non-productive periods • Redefine processes to take advantage of new mobile technologies
Luftansa Case • Q: Lufthansa was taking a risk with their decision to deploy notebook computers to their pilots. What steps did they take to manage that risk? • Ensured that technical specs for the equipment were acceptable to both pilots and the union. • Increase user buy-in by providing alternatives to cumbersome tasks (such as carrying manuals and technical documents around) • Standardization to reduce support and upgrade costs • Structured the process in phases; obtain feedback before mass implementation