military procurement density - meaning and definition. What is military procurement density
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What (who) is military procurement density - definition

Procurement PunchOut; Punchout (procurement)

Military acquisition         
  • US DoD Acquisition Process
PROCESS OF OBTAINING MATERIEL AND SUPPLIES FOR ARMED FORCES
Acquisition (military); Military Procurement; Military Acquisition; Military procurement; Defence procurement; Defense procurement; Weapon procurement; Weapons procurement
Military acquisition or defense acquisition is the "bureaucratic management and procurement process",US Department of Defense, quoted at IGI Global, Emerging Strategies in Defense Acquisitions and Military Procurement, accessed 21 April 2021 dealing with a nation's investments in the technologies, programs, and product support necessary to achieve its national security strategy and support its armed forces. Its objective is to acquire products that satisfy specified needs and provide measurable improvement to mission capability at a fair and reasonable price.
E-procurement         
PURCHASE OR SALE CONDUCTED THROUGH THE INTERNET
Electronic procurement system; Esourcing; Online procurement; E-tendering; E-purchasing; E Procurement; Electronic procurement
E-procurement (electronic procurement, sometimes also known as supplier exchange) is the business-to-business or business-to-consumer or business-to-government purchase and sale of supplies, work, and services through the Internet as well as other information and networking systems, such as electronic data interchange and enterprise resource planning.EUROPEAN BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT.
Density (computer storage)         
MEASURE OF THE QUANTITY OF INFORMATION BITS THAT CAN BE STORED ON A GIVEN LENGTH OF TRACK, AREA OF SURFACE, OR IN A GIVEN VOLUME OF A COMPUTER STORAGE MEDIUM
Bit density; Data storage density; Data density; Storage density; Storage densities; Memory storage densities; Computer storage density; Constant bit-density; Memory density; Memory storage density; Areal Density (Computer Storage); Areal storage density; Areal density (computer storage)
Density is a measure of the quantity of information bits that can be stored on a given length (linear density) of track, area of surface (areal density), or in a given volume (volumetric density) of a computer storage medium. Generally, higher density is more desirable, for it allows more data to be stored in the same physical space.

Wikipedia

CXML


cXML (commerce eXtensible Markup Language) is a protocol, created by Ariba in 1999, intended for communication of business documents between procurement applications, e-commerce hubs and suppliers. cXML is based on XML and provides formal XML schemas for standard business transactions, allowing programs to modify and validate documents without prior knowledge of their form.

The protocol does not include the full breadth of interactions some parties may wish to communicate. However, it can be expanded through the use of extrinsic elements and newly defined domains for various identifiers. This expansion is the limit of point-to-point configurations necessary for communication.

The current protocol includes documents for setup (company details and transaction profiles), catalogue content, application integration (including the widely used PunchOut feature), original, change and delete purchase orders and responses to all of these requests, order confirmation and ship notice documents (cXML analogues of EDI 855 and 856 transactions) and new invoice documents.

PunchOut is a protocol for interactive sessions managed across the Internet, a communication from one application to another, achieved through a dialog of real-time, synchronous cXML messages, which support user interaction at a remote site. This protocol is most commonly used today in the form of Procurement PunchOut, which specifically supports interactions between a procurement application and a supplier's eCommerce web site and possibly includes an intermediary for authentication and version matching. The buyer leaves or "punches out" of their company's system and goes to the supplier's web-based catalog to locate and add items to their shopping cart, while their application transparently maintains connection with the web site and gathers pertinent information. A vendor catalog, enhanced for this process, is known as a punchout catalog. PunchOut enables communication between the software and the web site so that relevant information about the transaction is delivered to the appropriate channels.

Since SAP's acquisition of Ariba in 2012, this protocol is owned by SAP.