Report on Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) ABSTRACT SOA is a design for linking business and computational resources (principally organizations‚ applications and data) on demand to achieve the desired results for service consumers (which can be end users or other services). Service-orientation describes an architecture that uses loosely coupled services to support the requirements of business processes and users. Resources on a network in a SOA environment are made available as independent
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Chapter 1: Database Systems Summary • Data are raw facts. Information is the result of processing data to reveal their meaning. Accurate‚ relavant and timely information is the key to good decision making and good decision making is the key to organizational survival in a global environment • Data are usually stored in a database. To implement a database and manage its contents you need a database management system (DBMS). DBMS serves as an intermediary between the user and the
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Table: Similar to spreadsheet used to store data. 2. Queries: Method of extracting specific data 3. Forms: Element to modify and insert records into you databases 4. Reports: It contains raw data and allows the organization of information in an easy way. 5. Databases: collection of associated information 6. Relational databases: access databases in which more than one can share information. 7. Record: each row in a table. 8. Data Value: an item such as data‚ or such as a single phone number.
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Mobile Database Systems [ 1 ] Jerri Scott Technical Essay #1 Mobile Database Systems MGT – 5151 Database Systems Management November 7‚ 2010 [ 2 ] Due to the increasing utilization of mobile networks and devices‚ mobile database systems have become a prominent method of data access. Data maintenance becomes a necessity for users who require mobility. Therefore‚ the usage of mobile database systems provides a convenient way of data creation‚ collection and management through mobile
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been the same. But living outside‚ with the freedom to roam widely for the purposes of hunting and gathering‚ suggests the need for at least a temporary shelter. And this‚ even at the simplest level‚ means the beginning of something approaching architecture. Confronted with the need for a shelter against sun or rain‚ the natural instinct is to lean some form of protective shield against a support - a leafy branch‚ for example‚ against the trunk of a tree. If there is no
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1. Define the terms e-business Aims to use and influence the unique qualities of Internet and Web 2. Define the terms e-commerce E-commerce involves digitally enabled commercial transactions between and among organizations and individuals 3. What is the key factor in determining if a transaction is “commerce”? Commercial transactions involve the exchange of value across organizational or individual boundaries in return for products or services 4. List and briefly
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chapter 10 The REA Approach to Database Modeling T his chapter examines the resources‚ events‚ and agents (REA) model as a means of specifying and designing accounting information systems that serve the needs of all of the users in an organization. The chapter is comprised of three major sections. The first introduces the REA approach and comments on the general problems associated with traditional accounting practice that can be resolved through an REA approach. This section presents the REA
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PhyloInformatics 7: 1-66 - 2005 Relational Database Design and Implementation for Biodiversity Informatics Paul J. Morris The Academy of Natural Sciences 1900 Ben Franklin Parkway‚ Philadelphia‚ PA 19103 USA Received: 28 October 2004 - Accepted: 19 January 2005 Abstract The complexity of natural history collection information and similar information within the scope of biodiversity informatics poses significant challenges for effective long term stewardship of that information in electronic
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Relational Database Design By Paul Litwin This paper was part of a presentation at a Microsoft TechEd conference in the mid-1990s. It was adapted from Microsoft Access 2 Developer’s Handbook‚ Sybex 1994‚ by Ken Getz‚ Paul Litwin and Greg Reddick. Reprinted with permission of the publisher. While the paper uses Microsoft Access (version 2) for the examples‚ the vast majority of the discussion applies to any database and holds up pretty well over 11 years after it was written. Overview Database design
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Specialized Database Presentation Specialized Database Presentation Team B: Chappell Grant‚ John Hainline Linda Hannigan DBM/384 Special Purpose Databases Brando Sumayao Specialized Database Presentation • • • • • • • • • • Executive Overview Strategic Goal Proposal Comparison of different database and purposes SQL concepts relative to spatial and temporal databases Uses of databases in the business environment Description of the information retrieval process in relations to the specialized
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