SCC 130 - Part 1
- Created by: Nely16
- Created on: 05-11-22 13:40
What are information systems?
The combination of hardware, software and telecommunications networks in order to collect, create, process, filter and distribute data within an organisation
Technology view
The emphasis is on information technology embedded in organisations and its importance and the understanding of hardware, software and networks.
Social view
An information system is a social system which has embedded in it information technology but is the human activity that enables organisations to deploy information technology to acheive their goals.
Socio-technical view
Interaction of the social and technological view. Focused on how technology is changing the nature of work, how it is organised and how it is carried out.
Process view
How activities and work processes can be performed and supported by technology and how we can automate and optimise work flows.
Types of information systems
- Transaction processing
- Decision support
- Knowledge management
- Learning management
- Database management
- ERP - enterprise resource planning
- GIS - geographic informaton systems
- Data warehouses
- Enterprise systems - CRM
Transaction processing systems
A transaction is a single event that changes something. It's an activity that changes stored data.
Examples include: payroll, order processing, reservations, employee records, accounts payable.
Batch processing
System gathers transactions over a period of time and then process them all at once.
Payroll for employees.
Real time processing
The system process the transaction in real-time.
When you book a seat on a flight, that seat is reserved in real time - no one else can select it.
OLTP - online transaction processing
Databases recording the day to day operational activities
Examples: airline bookings, bankong systems, shopping online and in supermarkets
Features
- Need extensive data control and availability
- High multi-user throughput
- Require a fast response time
- Normally used by clerical users rather than managers
OLAP - online analytical processing
Data from OLTP is used to aid in decision making - such as reports and summaries drawn from the operational data to inform decision making
Features:
- Trend analysis and forecasting
- Uses summarised historical data
- Entails complex queries, often building very large tables
- Read-intensive
- Decisions it informs are strategic so response time is critical
- Users are analysts
Historical trends
Shows decline in agricultural employment brought on by the industrial revolution (early and middle 19th century). Increase in % in workforce in manufacturing, peaked in early 20th century. Decline in management taken up by information sector.
Areas that influence development of information pr
RAMAC hard disk drive system
RAMAC (Random access method of accounting and control) was used and hired for calculating worker's wages
Magnetic recordings were first patented in 1898 by Vladimer Paulsen using electromagnets and magnetic wires
Up to the 1950s and later, engineers developed uses of magnetic recordings to record analogue music and other recordings on various media including tapes and discs
In 1956, IBM introduce RAMAC which was the first digital storage magnetic disk drive with a total stoager of 5 million characters, an aeral density of 2,000 bits / square inch, fifty 24-inch disks and it wa leased annually to companies for several thousand dollars.
Storage capacity of current media
Areal density:
- Hard disk drives has reached > 1 tera bit / square inch
- Compact disks can store around 1 giga bit / square inch
- DVD 2.2 giga bits / square inch
- HD DVD 7.5 giga bits / square inch
- Magnetic tape media has reached close to 1 giga bit / square inch
Five component framework
Remember:
- All 5 components are common to all information systems
- Learn to look for components of information systems
- Social networking
- Amazon
- Banks
- Realise too that an information system is an assembly of computers, programs, data, procedures and people
Five component framework example
Using the five component framework
High-tech versus low-tech information systems
Information systems differ in the amount of work that is moved from the human side to the computer side
When considering different information systems it is helpful to consider the low vs high tech choices too and remeber, the amount of work that is being moved from people to computers
Example:
- System A - consists only of a file of email addresses and an email program
- A small amount of work has been moved from human side to computer side
- Consierable human work is required to determine when to send which emails to which customers
- System B - keeps track of customer equipment, maintenance schedule, automatic email generation and reminders
- More work has been moved from human side to computer side so the computer is providing more services on behalf of humans
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