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CHAPTER 1. The Modern Organization in the Global, Web-Based Environment . How the internet supports today’s business. Learning Objectives. Differentiate among data, information, and knowledge. Distinguish between information technology infrastructure and information technology architecture.
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CHAPTER 1 The Modern Organization in the Global, Web-Based Environment How the internet supports today’s business.
Learning Objectives • Differentiate among data, information, and knowledge. • Distinguish between information technology infrastructure and information technology architecture. • Discuss the relationships among business pressures, organizational responses, and the role of information systems.
Chapter Outline 1.1 Information Systems: Concepts and Definitions 1.2 The Global, Web-Based Platform 1.3 Business Pressures, Organizational Responses, and IT Support 1.4 Why Are Information Systems Important to You? 1.5 The Plan of the Book
Chapter Opening Case P. 4 Google servers in a server farm Google Headquarters
Today we are … • The most connected generation in history. • Practicing continuous computing. • Surrounded by a personal, movable information network. • Our personal information network is created by constant cooperation between: • the digital devices we carry; • the wired and wireless networks that we access as we move about; • Web-based tools for finding information and communicating and collaborating with other people. • We can pull information from the Web and push ideas back to the Web.
1.1 Information Systems: Concepts and Definitions • Data Item • Elementary description of things, events, activities and transactions that are recorded, classified and stored but are not organized to convey any specific meaning. • Information • Data organized so that they have meaning and value to the recipient. • Knowledge • Data and/or information organized and processed to convey understanding, experience, accumulated learning and expertise as they apply to a current problem or activity.
1.1 Information Systems: Concepts and Definitions • Information Technology Architecture. • A high-level map or plan of the information assets in an organization, which guides current operations and is a blueprint for future directions. • Information Technology Infrastructure. • The physical facilities, IT components, IT services and IT personnel that support an entire organization.
1.1 Information Systems: Concepts and Definitions • IT components • consist of hardware, software, telecommunications and networks, and wireless communications. • IT components are basically synonymous with the IT platform. • IT services • consist of data management, managing security and risk, and systems development. • IT personnel use IT components to produce IT services.
1.2 The Global, Web-Based Platform • Best represented by the Internet and the World Wide Web. • Enables us to connect, compute, communicate, collaborate, and compete everywhere and anytime. • Operates without regard to geography, time, distance, and language.
The Stages of Globalization (From Thomas Friedman’s The World is Flat) • Globalization 1.0 (from 1492 to 1800) • Globalization 2.0 (from 1800 to 2000) • Globalization 3.0 (from 2000 to the present) 3.0 2.0 1.0
Globalization 1.0 • 1492 to 1800 • World went from large to medium-size. • All about countries the amount of muscle, horsepower, steam power, etc that they could deploy. • Key agents of change: brawn and horsepower. Christopher Columbus
Globalization 2.0 (first half) • 1800 – 2000 • Global integration during the first half of Globalization 2.0 was driven by falling transportation costs. • steam engine • railroads Steam engine Railroads
Globalization 2.0 (second half) • Global integration during the second half of Globalization 2.0 was driven by falling communications costs. • satellites, • fiber optics, • personal computer, and • wireless smart phones Fiber optics Satellites
Globalization 3.0 Key agent of change: Software, in conjunction with the global internet enabling people to collaborate and compete globally. 3.0 2.0 1.0 2000 to the present. Driven by the convergence of ten forces (flatteners). Result: emergence of a global, web-based platform.
Globalization 3.0 (continued) Schematic Map of the Internet
1 - Fall of the Berlin Wall November 9, 1989 Free market economies of Eastern Europe (1991) and Rise of the European Union.
2 - Netscape Goes Public • August 9, 1995 Marc Andreessen (wrote Mosaic browser and Netscape browser)
3 - Workflow Software • Enables computer applications to interoperate or communicate and work with one another without human intervention. • Standards such as Extensible Markup Language (XML) enable workflow communication.
4 - Uploading • Anyone can create and upload content to the web. • Shift from static, passive approach to media to an active participatory approach. • The Open Source Movement: an essential ingredient of uploading.
The Open Source Movement Linux Firefox Mozilla Thunderbird
5 - Outsourcing • Involves taking a specific function that a company was doing itself, having another company perform that same function and then integrating their work back into the original company. • Outsourcing gained momentum and “took off” with Year 2000 (Y2K) problem.
6 - Offshoring • Occurs when a company moves an entire operation, or certain tasks to another country. • The operation and/or activities are performed the same way, but with cheaper labor, lower taxes, fewer benefits, etc. Call center in India
7 - Supply Chaining • Occurs when companies, their suppliers, and their customers collaborate and share information. • Requires common standards so each segment of the chain can efficiently interface/communicate.
8 - Insourcing • Delegates operations or jobs within a business to another company, which specializes in those operations. • Example: Dell hires FedEx to analyze Dell’s shipping process and then “take over” that process. FedEx employees work inside Dell but remain employed by Fed Ex.
9 - Informing • Ability to search for information (e.g., search engines). • Facilitates the formation of global communities. • There are MANY other interesting search engines as we see in Chapter 5
10 - The IT Steroids • The IT Steroids amplify the other flatteners. • They enable all forms of computing and collaboration to be digital, mobile, virtual, and personal. • Digital • All analog content and processes are being digitized. • Mobile • Thanks to wireless technologies, computing, connecting, collaborating can be done anywhere. • Virtual • The process of shaping, manipulating, and transmitting digitized content can be done at very high speeds, so that users do not have to think about these processes. • Personal • Individuals can perform all the virtual processes on their own computing devices.
The IT Steroids • Computing-Processing • Computing-Storage • Instant Messaging and File Sharing • Wireless Technologies • Voice over Internet Protocol • Videoconferencing • Computer Graphics
Computing - Processing TO Ultramobile personal computer Charles Babbage’s Difference Engine (1822)
Computing - Storage TO Sony Micro Vault Thumb Drive Capacity: 2 gigabytes First disk storage unit by IBM (1956) Capacity: 5 megabytes Size: Refrigerator
Instant Messaging and File Sharing Instant messaging (example) File sharing (example)
Wireless Technologies Using cell phone in motion Geostationary satellite Bluetooth phone sunglasses
Videoconferencing An individual telepresence system A telepresence system in a conference room
Videoconferencing and Medicine New Zealand used Polycom, a leading vendor of telepresence systems, to provide a telemedicine application for children.
1.3 Business Pressures, Organizational Responses, and IT Support • Business Pressures • The business environment is the combination of social, legal, economic, physical, and political factors that affect business activities. • Significant changes in any of these factor are likely to create business pressure on the organization. • The three types of business pressures faced are: • Market Pressures • Technology Pressures • Societal Pressures
Market Pressures • The Global Economy and Strong Competition • European Union • NAFTA • Labor Costs • The Changing Nature of the Workforce • Diversified • Telecommuting • Powerful Customers • Sophisticated • Knowledgeable • Customer RelationshipManagement (CRM)
Technology Pressures • Information Overload • Amount of information on the internet doubles approximately every year. • Technological Innovation and Obsolescence • Today’s state-of-the-art products may be obsolete tomorrow. e.g., CRT monitors vs LCD monitors
Technological Innovation and Obsolescence Obsolescence: Slide Rule Innovation: Early calculator
Technological Innovation and Obsolescence (continued) Innovation: Telegraph Obsolescence: Pony Express
Technological Innovation and Obsolescence (continued) Innovation: iPod nano Obsolescence: old phonograph
Technological Innovation and Obsolescence (continued) Innovation: digital camera Innovation: “Credit card” digital camera Obsolescence: old analog camera
Technological Innovation and Obsolescence (continued) Obsolescence: Horse and Buggy Innovation: Ford Model T
Technological Innovation and Obsolescence (continued) Obsolescence: Manual typewriter Innovation: Notebook computer with word processing software
Societal Pressures-The Third Category Of Business Pressures • Social Responsibility • Digital devide – gap between those who have access to IT and those who do not. • Government Regulation and Deregulation • Sarbanes –Oxley, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) • Protection Against Terrorist Attacks • Dept of Homeland Security – US-VISIT • Ethical Issues • China Olympics and foreign press access to internet • Newspapers/governments editing photographs
Social Responsibility One Laptop per Child initiative
Social Responsibility (continued) Internet over satellite in developing nations