Introduction to information systems T. Cornford, M. Shaikh is1 060 2013
Chapter 4: Contemporary trends in
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T. Cornford, M. Shaikh-13
Chapter 4: Contemporary trends in
information and communication technologies 4.1 Introduction This course is about information systems, not about technology taken on its own. The technology we primarily consider, IT or ICT, is the subject of other academic fields such as electronics, computer science, software engineering, or communications engineering. Each of these fields is relevant to us at times, but they are in general at the edge of our primary concerns in this course. Thus for this course, it is not appropriate to see these technologies in isolation from their use by organisations and by people, the tasks they help us achieve, the reasons we use them, and the various services and infrastructures that they rely on. And yet, it is hard to talk about information systems without at the very least making some fairly important assumptions about the technology that is present as part of the information system, and what it is expected to do. Even the most ‘business’ oriented discussion of, for example, e-commerce, will be based on an assumption that the internet is widely available, generally reliable, safe and secure, and that certain software (for example, web browsers) and various types of devices (PC, tablets, smartphones) are available and work. Such a discussion may also need to reflect how the availability, characteristics and mode of use of all this technology changes over time. Ten or more years ago we had no really mobile devices as understood today – laptops in those days were known as ‘luggables’ and mobile phones in films from the late 1980s are the size of a house brick. Today in countries both rich and poor, we are used to using mobile phones to access information systems (or perhaps we should say as ‘part of’ information systems), and increasingly we are moving to multi-function tablet devices such as the Apple iPad. It is also fairly clear that in 10 more years (2023) things will have changed again, although the authors of this guide are not clever or confident enough to say exactly how. Many introductory books provide an adequate coverage of basic technologies, and most students taking this course will have some experience of using some types of ICT – although more in their personal lives than in a business or organisational context. What you read about technology in textbooks may at times seem a little dated. This is not surprising. First, because it takes time for a text book author to conclude that something is important, to write about it with examples, for the manuscript to be edited and the book to appear in a shop. (Although these same technologies might be able to speed up this process a bit perhaps?) But it also reflects the need for people who study technologies in organisational settings to understand that, while our attention may be drawn to all things new in technology, real organisations with long histories will have lots of older technology within them. So a little history, or attention to past trends, is still relevant knowledge today. And the language we use to speak about information systems is very influenced by that past too. IS1060 Introduction to information systems 46 Working with information systems today (in 2013) is not all about smartphones, iPads and social networking. It is a lot about managing the results of previous decisions and the technologies of previous generations. We even have a name for such systems and technology – we call them legacy systems or legacy technologies – that is, systems and technologies that are handed down from a previous generation. Often a project to develop a new information system is quite constrained by the legacy systems that surround it and which it will need to interact with. Download 0.65 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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