Information Systems Factory - meaning and definition. What is Information Systems Factory
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What (who) is Information Systems Factory - definition

AMERICAN COMPUTER SCIENTIST AND CO-FOUNDER OF THE DATA WAREHOUSE
William H. Inmon; Inmon, William H.; Corporate Information Factory; William Inmon; Corporate information factory; Information factory

Information Systems Factory      
(ISF) An equivalent to an SEE. [Simultaneous Engineering Environment or {Software Engineering Environment}?] (2000-12-30)
Geographic Information System         
  • Hillshade model derived from a [[digital elevation model]] of the Valestra area in the northern Apennines (Italy)
  • forest inventories]], monitoring and mapping.
  • OGC standards help GIS tools communicate.
  • John Snow]]'s 1855 map of the [[Soho]] [[cholera]] outbreak showing the clusters of cholera cases in the [[London]] epidemic of 1854
  • A traditional topographic map rendered in 3D
SPATIAL DATA INFORMATION SYSTEMS
GIS; Geographic information systems; Geographical information system; Geographic Information Systems; Mobile GIS; Gis software; Geographical information systems; Geographical Information Systems; Geographical Information Service; Geographic Information System; Geographical Information System; Graphical information system; Graphical Information System; Geospatial Information System; GIS applications; Geoprocessing; Geospatial Information Systems; Geographic information system (GIS); Geo-Information Technology; Geo-Information Science; Geo-information science; Geoinformationssystem; Applications of geographic information systems; History of geographic information systems; Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
<application> (GIS) A computer system for capturing, storing, checking, integrating, manipulating, analysing and displaying data related to positions on the Earth's surface. Typically, a GIS is used for handling maps of one kind or another. These might be represented as several different layers where each layer holds data about a particular kind of feature (e.g. roads). Each feature is linked to a position on the graphical image of a map. Layers of data are organised to be studied and to perform statistical analysis (i.e. a layer of customer locations could include fields for Name, Address, Contact, Number, Area). Uses are primarily government related, town planning, local authority and public utility management, environmental, resource management, engineering, business, marketing, and distribution. {GIS dictionary (http://geo.ed.ac.uk/root/agidict/html/welcome.html)}. Information Systemngraphic/wotzagis.html">http://ncl.ac.uk/Geographic Information Systemngraphic/wotzagis.html. (1995-12-21)
Management Information System         
FOCUSES ON THE MANAGER OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY TO PROVIDE EFFICIENCY AND EFFECTIVENESS OR STRATEGY DECISION MAKING;THE CONCEPT MAY INCLUDE SYSTEMS TERMED TRANSACTION PROCESSING SYSTEM, DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEM, EXPERT OR EXECUTIVE INFORMATION SYSTEM
Management Information Systems; Management information systems; Management Information System; Management of information systems; Management of Information Systems; Computer Information System; MIS basics; Managing information system; Computer based information systems; Management information; History of management information systems; Integrated advanced information management system
<application> (MIS) A computer system, usually based on a mainframe or minicomputer, designed to provide management personnel with up-to-date information on an organisation's performance, e.g. inventory and sales. These systems output information in a form that is useable by managers at all levels of the organisation: strategic, tactical, and operational. A good example of an MIS report is an annual report for a stockholder (a scheduled report). [Que's Computer User's Dictionary Second Edition, 1992]. (2001-04-01)

Wikipedia

Bill Inmon

William H. Inmon (born 1945) is an American computer scientist, recognized by many as the father of the data warehouse. Inmon wrote the first book, held the first conference (with Arnie Barnett), wrote the first column in a magazine and was the first to offer classes in data warehousing. Inmon created the accepted definition of what a data warehouse is - a subject oriented, nonvolatile, integrated, time variant collection of data in support of management's decisions. Compared with the approach of the other pioneering architect of data warehousing, Ralph Kimball, Inmon's approach is often characterized as a top-down approach.