Chapter 5: Information Infrastructure
Grid Computing
A collection of computers, often geographically dispersed, that are coordinated to solve a common problem
Data Center
A facility used to house management information systems and associated components, such as telecommunications and storage systems. Also called server farms.
Cloud Security Alliance (CSA)
A nonprofit organization that promotes research into best practices for securing cloud computing and cloud delivery models
Business Impact Analysis
A process that identifies all critical business functions and the effect that a specific disaster may have upon them.
Hot Site
A separate and fully equipped facility where the company can move immediately after a disaster and resume business
Cold Site
A separate facility that does not have any computer equipment, but is a place where employees can move after a disaster
Warm Site
A separate facility with computer equipment that requires installation and configuration
Vulnerability
A system weakness that can be exploited by a threat; for example, a password that is never changed or a system left on while an employee goes to lunch.
Backup
An exact copy of a system's information
Corporate Social Responsibility
Companies' acknowledged responsibility to society
Sustainable, or "green," MIS
Describes the production, management, use, and disposal of technology in a way that minimizes damage to the environment
Serviceability
How quickly a third-party can change a system to ensure it meets user needs and the terms of any contracts, including agreed levels of reliability, maintainability, or availability
Carbon Emissions
Includes the carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide produced by business processes and systems
Moore's Law
Refers to the computer chip performance per dollar doubling every 18 months
Sustainable MIS Disposal
Refers to the safe disposal of MIS assets at the end of their life cycle
Accessibility
Refers to the varying levels that define what a user can access, view, or perform when operating a system
System Virtualization
The ability to present the resources of a single computer as if it is a collection of separate computers ("virtual machines"), each with its own virtual CPUs, network interfaces, storage, and operating system.
Usability
The degree to which a system is easy to learn and efficient and satisfying to use
Cloud Fabric
The software that makes possible the benefits of cloud computing, such as multi-tenancy
Network
a communication system created by linking two or more devices and establishing a standard methodology in which they can communicate
Green PC
a computer built using environmentally friendly materials and designed to save energy
Server
a computer dedicated to providing information in response to requests
Client
a computer designed to request information from a server
Disaster Recovery Plan
a detailed process for recovering information or a system in the event of a catastrophic disaster
Enterprise Architect
a person grounded in technology, fluent in business, and able to provide the important bridge between MIS and the business
Multi-Tenancy
a single instance of a system serves multiple customers
Fail Over
a specific type of fault tolerance, occurs when a redundant storage server offers an exact replica of the real-time data, and if the primary server crashes, the users are automatically directed to the secondary server or backup server
Emergency
a sudden, unexpected event requiring immediate action due to potential threat to health and safety, the environment, or property
Cloud Fabric Controller
an individual who monitors and provisions cloud resources, similar to a server administrator at an individual company
Emergency Notification Service
an infrastructure built for notifying people in the event of an emergency
Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
brings together people from industry, disability organizations, government, and research labs from around the world to develop guidelines and resources to help make the web accessible to people with disabilities, including auditory, cognitive, neurological, physical, speech, and visual disabilities
Disaster Recovery Cost Curve
charts (1) the cost to the company of the unavailability of information and technology and (2) the cost to the company of recovering from a disaster over time
Storage Virtualization
combines multiple network storage devices so they appear to be a single storage device
Network Virtualization
combines networks by splitting the available bandwidth into independent channels that can be assigned in real time to a specific device
Server Virtualization
combines the physical resources, such as servers, processors, and operating systems, from the applications
Hardware
consists of the physical devices associated with a computer system
Incident Record
contains all of the details of the incident
Virtualization
creates multiple virtual machines on a single computing device. An example is a virtualized computer printer that functions as a fax machine, answering machine, and copy machine all on one physical machine, thereby reducing costs, power requirements, and ewaste.
Software as a Service (SaaS)
delivers applications over the cloud using a pay-per-use revenue model
Smart Grid
delivers electricity using two-way digital technology, making it more efficient and reliable by adding the ability to monitor, analyze, and control the transmission of power remotely.
Scalability
describes how well a system can scale up, or adapt to the increased demands of growth
Business Continuity Plan (BCP)
details how a company recovers and restores critical business operations and systems after a disaster or extended disruption. - BCP contains disaster recovery plans along with many additional plans, including prioritizing business impact analysis, emergency notification plans, and technology recovery strategies.
Capacity Planning
determines future environmental infrastructure requirements to ensure high-quality system performance
Single-Tenancy
each customer or tenant must purchase and maintain an individual system
Emergency Preparedness
ensures a company is ready to respond to an emergency in an organized, timely, and effective manner
Reliability (accuracy)
ensures a system is functioning correctly and providing accurate information
Data as a Service (DaaS)
facilitates the accessibility of business-critical data in a timely, secure, and affordable manner
Technology Recovery Strategies
focus specifically on prioritizing the order for restoring hardware, software, and data across the organization that best meets business recovery requirements - hardware, software, data centers, and networking (connectivity)
Sustainable MIS Infrastructure
identifies ways that a company can grow in terms of computing resources while simultaneously becoming less dependent on hardware and energy consumption - Supporting environment
Information MIS Infrastructure
identifies where and how important information, such as customer records, is maintained and secured - Supporting operations
Agile MIS Infrastructure
includes the hardware, software, and telecommunications equipment that, when combined, provides the underlying foundation to support the organization's goals. - Supporting change
MIS Infrastructure
includes the plans for how a firm will build, deploy, use, and share its data, processes, and MIS assets. A solid MIS infrastructure can reduce costs, improve productivity, optimize business operations, generate growth, and increase profitability.
Hybrid Cloud
includes two or more private, public, or community clouds, but each cloud remains separate and is only linked by technology that enables data and application portability
Security as a Service (SECaaS)
involves applications such as anti-virus software delivered over the Internet with constant virus definition updates that are not reliant on user compliance
Web Accessibility
means that people with disabilities can use the web
Dynamic Scaling
means the MIS infrastructure can be automatically scaled up or down based on needed requirements
Performance
measures how quickly a system performs a certain process or transaction
High Availability
occurs when a system is continuously operational at all times
Technology Failure
occurs when the ability of a company to operate is impaired because of a hardware, software, or data outage
Fail Back
occurs when the primary machine recovers and resumes operations, taking over from the secondary server
Big Data as a Service (BDaaS)
offers a cloud-based Big Data service to help organizations analyze massive amounts of data to solve business dilemmas
Utility Computing
offers a pay-per-use revenue model similar to a metered service such as gas or electricity
Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS)
offers backup services that use cloud resources to protect applications and data from disruption caused by disaster
Unified Communications as a Service (UCaaS)
offers enterprise communication and collaboration services over the Internet such as instant messaging systems, online meetings, and video conferencing
Public Cloud
promotes massive, global, and industrywide applications offered to the general public
Noisy Neighbor
refers to a multi-tenancy co-tenant that monopolizes bandwidth, servers, CPUs, and other resources that cause network performance issues
Ewaste
refers to discarded, obsolete, or broken electronic devices
Maintainability (or flexibility)
refers to how quickly a system can transform to support environmental changes
Portability
refers to the ability of an application to operate on different devices or software platforms, such as different operating systems
Clean Computing
refers to the environmentally responsible use, manufacture, and disposal of technology products and computer equipment
Availability
refers to the time frames when the system is operational
Capacity
represents the maximum throughput a system can deliver. For example, the capacity of a hard drive represents its size or volume
Upcycle
reuses or refurbishes ewaste and creates a new product
Community Cloud
serves a specific community with common business models, security requirements, and compliance considerations
Private Cloud
serves only one customer or organization and can be located on the customer's premises or off the customer's premises
Cloud Computing
stores, manages, and processes data and applications over the internet rather than on a personal computer or server
Platform as a Service (PaaS)
supports the deployment of entire systems including hardware, networking, and applications using a pay-per-use revenue model
Fault Tolerance
the ability for a system to respond to unexpected failures or system crashes as the backup system immediately and automatically takes over with no loss of service
Recovery
the ability to get a system up and running in the event of a system crash or failure that includes restoring the information backup
Energy Consumption
the amount of energy consumed by business processes and systems
Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)
the delivery of computer hardware capability, including the use of servers, networking, and storage, as a service
Incident Management
the process responsible for managing how incidents are identified and corrected
Software
the set of instructions the hardware executes to carry out specific tasks
Incident
unplanned interruption of a service
Administrator Access
unrestricted access to the entire system
Hybrid Cloud Storage
uses both on-site and off-site resources to store corporate data
Cloud Bursting
when a company uses its own computing infrastructure for normal usage and accesses the cloud when it needs to scale for peak load requirements, ensuring that a sudden spike in usage does not result in poor performance or system crashes
Unavailable
when a system is not operating or cannot be used