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VU
Information
System (CS507)
Lesson
9
Infrastructure
Infrastructure,
generally, is the set of interconnected structural
elements that provide the
framework for
supporting
the entire structure. It usually applies
only to structures that are
artificial. The term is
used
differently
in a variety of fields; perhaps the single
most well-known usage is in
economics, where it
refers
to
physical infrastructure such as buildings
and roads.
The
notion that a structure has
an internal framework is popular
especially in business organizations
where
a
dependency on interconnected information technology
systems has become as prevalent as a
city's
dependency
on interconnected conveyance systems for
power, people and things.
Information
infrastructure
consists of the physical facilities
services and management that
support all computing
resources
in an organization. There are five major
components of infrastructure
·
Computer
hardware
·
General
purpose software
·
Networks
& communication facilities
·
Databases
·
Information
management personnel
·
Each
of these components is designed in
such manner to collectively meet the
needs and objectives
of the
organization.
The
infrastructure will include
·
The
detailed configuration of the
hardware
·
Design
of the operating system,
·
Documentation
of the operational and application
software, and
·
Documentation
on how to technically manage and
operate the entire system
·
Infrastructure
also includes the integration,
operation, documentation, maintenance and
management
the
components as defined in
infrastructure.
·
It is guideline to
how specific computing
resources are arranged,
operated and managed.
9.1
Architecture
Architecture
more specifically is related to
defining the information needs
and how these will be
obtained
through
the various application software
modules. Architecture is the "Blueprint"
that provides the
conceptual
foundation for building
information infrastructure and specific
applications. It is a way of
mapping
information requirements and
resources. Architecture covers
following components:
·
The
business needs of the
information
·
Existing
planned information infrastructure and applications in
the organizations.
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VU
Information
System (CS507)
9.1.1
Information Architecture
In
context of web design
Information (Or design for
related media Information).
Architecture is defined by
the
Information Architecture Institute
as
1. The
structural design of shared information
environments.
2. The
art and science of organizing and
labeling web sites, intranets,
online communities and
software to
support
usability.
3. An
emerging community of practice focused on
bringing principles of design and
architecture to the
digital
landscape.
An
alternate definition of Information
Architecture exists within the
context of information
system
design,
in which information architecture
refers to data modeling and the
analysis and design of
the
information
in the system, concentrating on entities and
their interdependencies. Data modeling
depends
on
abstraction; the relationship between the
pieces of data is of more
interest than the particulars
of
individual
records, though cataloging
possible values is a common
technique. The usability of
human-
facing
systems, and standards
compliance of internal ones, is
paramount.
The
term information architecture describes a
specialized skill set which
relates to the management of
information
and employment of informational tools. It
has a significant degree of association
with the
library
sciences. Many library
schools now teach
information architecture.
9.2
Components/Sub-Systems of CBIS
Following
are the components / subsystems of
CBIS
·
Transaction
Processing System
·
Management
Information System
·
Support
Systems
·
Office
Automation System
·
Decision Support
System
·
Knowledge
System
·
Executive Support
System
Let's
consider them one by
one.
9.3
Transaction Processing System
This
system is used to record
transactions of routine and
repetitive nature.
For
Instance
·
Defining
eh transaction recording structure
·
Placing
customer orders
·
Billing
customers
·
Other
basic business
transactions
30
VU
Information
System (CS507)
Features
·
It is a
repetitive number crunching
system.
·
Today the
transaction processing systems
are more sophisticated and
complex but spirit is
same,
that
is to record routine business
transactions, irrespective of their
complexity, so as to help in
analysis
and report generation at a higher
level.
·
Help
to cater needs for operational level
management.
·
Rapid
Response
Fast
performance with a rapid
response time is critical. Businesses cannot
afford to have customers
waiting
for a
TPS to respond, the turnaround time
from the input of the transaction to the
production for the
output
must be a few seconds or
less.
Reliability
·
Many
organizations rely heavily on their TPS;
a breakdown will disrupt operations or
even stop the
business.
For a TPS to be effective its
failure rate must be very
low. If a TPS does fail,
then quick and
accurate
recovery must be possible.
This makes welldesigned backup
and recovery
procedures
essential.
·
Inflexibility
·
A TPS
wants every transaction to be
processed in the same way
regardless of the user, the
customer
or the time
for day. If a TPS were
flexible, there would be too
many opportunities for
non-standard
operations,
for example, a commercial
airline needs to consistently
accept airline reservations
from a
range
of travel agents, accepting different
transactions data from
different travel agents would be
a
problem.
Controlled
processing
·
The
processing in a TPS must support an
organization's operations. For
example if an organisation
allocates
roles and responsibilities to particular
employees, then the TPS should
enforce and maintain
this
requirement.
Data
Processing Tasks
·
Major
data processing tasks which
a TPS is expected to per
form are
·
Data
identification and Gathering keying
in the data or obtaining it directly from
machines by
providing
suitable interface
·
Data
manipulation/Analysis refers to
transformation of data into
information
·
Classifying
·
Sorting
·
Calculating
·
Summarizing
·
Data
storage data is kept
somewhere in a sequenced manner
until when needed.
·
Document
Preparation output for managers as
reports or as input to other
systems.
·
Goals
a TPS is supposed to achieve
are predefined and highly
structured, for
instance
31
VU
Information
System (CS507)
·
Checking
a customer's credit limit every time an
order is received
·
Checking
inventory level before accepting an
order
·
Payroll generation
on monthly basis
9.4
Management Information
System
MIRS
makes information available to relevant
users by producing pre-determined and
pre-designed
reports required by
the management. Management information
system helps middle level
management
planning,
controlling and decision
making. The data stored
can be used or manipulated to
produce
differently
defined reports from pre-defined reports.
It can be presented graphically or
pictorially. The
reports
generated by the MIS are
used for analytical decision
making by the management. The
application
software can construct projections,
build scenarios, do what if analysis to
enable better
decision
making.
For
Example
MIS
will use the TPS data to
generate monthly and weekly
summaries as per requirement
(product,
customer
and salesperson. Major
purpose is report generation. We
would discuss major types of
reports.
·
Periodic reports
daily, weekly, monthly, annually,
format is predefined and structured
for
convenience.
·
Special
Management by Exception reports
only when a special event
occurs which needs to
be
monitored.
For instance
·
Report
sequence to highlight- fast
moving & slow
moving
·
Group
the exceptions together Aged
accounts receivable
·
Show
variance from the norm
Sales analysis report
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