system management - meaning and definition. What is system management
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What (who) is system management - definition

ENTERPRISE-WIDE ADMINISTRATION OF DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS INCLUDING COMPUTER SYSTEMS
System management; PC Management Software; System management (computing); Desktop management; Enterprise systems management; Desktop Management; Systems Management

system management         
<job> Activities performed by a system manager, aiming to minimise the use of excessive, redundant resources to address the overlapping requirements of performance balancing, network management, reducing outages, system maintenance costs, diagnosis and repair, and migration to new hardware and software system versions. Compare: system administration. (1995-11-10)
Systems management         
Systems management refers to enterprise-wide administration of distributed systems including (and commonly in practice) computer systems. Systems management is strongly influenced by network management initiatives in telecommunications.
Translation management system         
TYPE OF SOFTWARE FOR AUTOMATING MANY PARTS OF THE HUMAN LANGUAGE TRANSLATION PROCESS AND MAXIMIZING TRANSLATOR EFFICIENCY
GMS Technology; Globalization Management System; Globalization management system
A translation management system (TMS), formerly globalization management system (GMS), is a type of software for automating many parts of the human language translation process and maximizing translator efficiency. The idea of a translation management system is to automate all repeatable and non-essential work that can be done by software/systems and leaving only the creative work of translation and review to be done by human beings.

Wikipedia

Systems management

Systems management refers to enterprise-wide administration of distributed systems including (and commonly in practice) computer systems. Systems management is strongly influenced by network management initiatives in telecommunications. The application performance management (APM) technologies are now a subset of Systems management. Maximum productivity can be achieved more efficiently through event correlation, system automation and predictive analysis which is now all part of APM.

Centralized management has a time and effort trade-off that is related to the size of the company, the expertise of the IT staff, and the amount of technology being used:

  • For a small business startup with ten computers, automated centralized processes may take more time to learn how to use and implement than just doing the management work manually on each computer.
  • A very large business with thousands of similar employee computers may clearly be able to save time and money, by having IT staff learn to do systems management automation.
  • A small branch office of a large corporation may have access to a central IT staff, with the experience to set up automated management of the systems in the branch office, without need for local staff in the branch office to do the work.

Systems management may involve one or more of the following tasks:

  • Hardware inventories.
  • Server availability monitoring and metrics.
  • Software inventory and installation.
  • Anti-virus and anti-malware.
  • User's activities monitoring.
  • Capacity monitoring.
  • Security management.
  • Storage management.
  • Network capacity and utilization monitoring.
  • Anti-manipulation management
Examples of use of system management
1. One is an external company to manage the power system, without any mechanism in hand to extract system management from the hands of the IEC.
2. A senior ministry official told Haaretz that the HMO‘s conduct "presents a legal problem but beyond that, this is a very difficult moral problem." A Clalit official responded, "These are two complex cases, in which there is a dispute between Clalit and the ministry official who oversees application of the National Health Insurance Law." Professor Gabi Ben Nun of the department for health system management at Ben–Gurion University in Be‘er Sheva called the HMOs‘ behavior a "scandal." "The dispute over the criteria of the health basket must not come at the expense of the patient," Ben Nun said.
3. Bangalore IT.In conferences will focus on "beyond bangalore", information technology in system management by the newly formed ITSM forum India, human resources in it by the HR India foundation, Tiecon 2005 on "innovating – in India for India by India" by the Indus entrepreneur (TIE) chapter and "accelerating technology – in semiconductor space" by the Indian semiconductor association (ISA). The trade seminars will deliberate on it clustering in the UK, ‘bridging Barcelona & India – exploring it business opportunities‘, "global zone – Bavaria: invest in Bavaria" and indo–French seminar on micro and nano technologies research skills in Rhone–Alps, France.