scholarly journals THE INFLUENCE OF THE METHOD OF ADAPTIVE SELF-DIAGNOSIS ON THE PROCESS OF PREVENTING THE CONSEQUENCES OF MODULE FAILURES ENTERPRISE INFORMATION SYSTEM

Author(s):  
V.V. Sobchuk ◽  
O.V. Barabash ◽  
A.P. Musienko

The study continues the properties of functional stability. Functional stability means the property of an information system to maintain its functioning, possibly with a decrease in quality, for a specified time under the influence of external and internal destabilizing factors. External and internal destabilizing factors are failures, failures of system modules, mechanical damage, thermal effects, errors of service personnel. The main stages of ensuring functional stability are the detection of the module that failed in the control, diagnosing the module that failed and the restoration of the information system of the enterprise. The peculiarity of enterprise information systems is that they must function autonomously. With their help, the systems can increase the productivity of all production centers while reducing the number of people employed in production and significantly reducing the share of manual labor. The paper investigates how, based on the functional dependence of failure probability on a certain probability value at different values, the probability of control error of the second kind can determine the recommended interval of the result, which will provide, given the intensity of readiness control allowable failure probability. It is illustrated how at a given intensity of the result it is possible to determine such an intensity of readiness control at which the probability of skipping will not exceed the maximum allowable value. It is shown that we can talk about the weak dependence of the probability of skipping on the control error of the second kind, which means that the achievement of a given control reliability is based on the intensity of readiness control and less depends on the reliability of individual basic checks. For the case when in the intervals between the issuance of the result the system checks the readiness of the modules is randomly described the method of calculating the probability of skipping.

2014 ◽  
Vol 687-691 ◽  
pp. 1810-1813
Author(s):  
Wei Wang ◽  
Wen Ting Yang ◽  
Gui Xian Ye ◽  
Jun Lan Sun

Enterprise information system is based on the condition of the computer network technology information platform. It has an important value for enterprises to enhance its brand influence, enhance customer management, promote the development of e-commerce processes, promote enterprise management level, adapt to the current situation of information and other aspects of economic development. There are some problems in the current enterprise information system construction. The current information system should make scientific plan, expand information systems development space, play a catalytic role in the government promote, emphasis on information security, strengthen of human resources and team building starting implementation of enterprise information systems building strategy.


Author(s):  
Tony Jewels

Although the notion of an enterprise information system (EIS) has been around now for several decades, there appears still to be a general lack of understanding within various sections of higher education over the true nature of these systems and subsequently how they should be presented to students. Although the topic itself is currently a hot one, with potential employers around the globe eagerly seeking new graduates versed in various aspects of EIS, this apparent lack of understanding has the potential to translate into courses or curricula that may not provide the most appropriate graduate skill sets. This chapter discusses how one university in the United Arab Emirates is addressing this issue by providing a curriculum and courses that set out to develop local graduates that will be highly valued by organisations seeking to extract full value from their own EIS’s.


Author(s):  
Malihe Tabatabaie ◽  
Richard Paige ◽  
Chris Kimble

The concept of an Enterprise Information System (EIS) has arisen from the need to deal with the increasingly volatile requirements of modern large-scale organisations. An EIS is a platform capable of supporting and integrating a wide range of activities across an organisation. In principle, the concept is useful and applicable to any large and SMEs, international or national business organisation. However, the range of applications for EIS is growing and they are now being used to support e-government, health care, and non-profit / non-governmental organisations. This chapter reviews research and development efforts related to EIS, and as a result attempts to precisely define the boundaries for the concept of EIS, i.e., identifying what is and what is not an EIS. Based on this domain analysis, a proposal for using goal-oriented modelling techniques for building EIS is constructed; the proposal is made more concrete through illustration via an example.


Author(s):  
Malihe Tabatabaie ◽  
Richard Paige ◽  
Chris Kimble

The concept of an Enterprise Information System (EIS) has arisen from the need to deal with the increasingly volatile requirements of modern large-scale organisations. An EIS is a platform capable of supporting and integrating a wide range of activities across an organisation. In principle, the concept is useful and applicable to any large and SMEs, international or national business organisation. However, the range of applications for EIS is growing and they are now being used to support e-government, health care, and non-profit / non-governmental organisations. This chapter reviews research and development efforts related to EIS, and as a result attempts to precisely define the boundaries for the concept of EIS, i.e., identifying what is and what is not an EIS. Based on this domain analysis, a proposal for using goal-oriented modelling techniques for building EIS is constructed; the proposal is made more concrete through illustration via an example.


2008 ◽  
pp. 2401-2426
Author(s):  
N. Bajgoric

Significant changes in information technology (IT), the Internet, and e-business technology have increased the need for continuous and agile data access, in particular for mission-critical applications. Modern business computing has evolved into an organizational engine that drives business and provides a powerful source for competitive advantage. IT has been integrated into organizational operations and activities in a way that application downtime is not an option since each hour, even minute of downtime may generate negative financial effects. In order to achieve higher levels of competitiveness, business has to be continuous from data availability perspective and agile with regard to data access. An enterprise information system (EIS) can be qualified as “high-quality” in terms of its architecture, application platform, and information it can provide to users but if that information is unavailable when it is needed by customer, manager, or any other end user, the value of that EIS simply becomes “zeroed” from end-users’ point of view. The chapter presents a framework for implementation of continuous computing technologies for improving business continuity. The framework is presented within a systemic view of developing an “always-on” enterprise information system.


Author(s):  
Nijaz Bajgoric

Significant changes in information technology (IT), the Internet, and e-business technology have increased the need for continuous and agile data access, in particular for mission-critical applications. Modern business computing has evolved into an organizational engine that drives business and provides a powerful source for competitive advantage. IT has been integrated into organizational operations and activities in a way that application downtime is not an option since each hour, even minute of downtime may generate negative financial effects. In order to achieve higher levels of competitiveness, business has to be continuous from data availability perspective and agile with regard to data access. An enterprise information system (EIS) can be qualified as “high-quality” in terms of its architecture, application platform, and information it can provide to users but if that information is unavailable when it is needed by customer, manager, or any other end user, the value of that EIS simply becomes “zeroed” from end-users’ point of view. The chapter presents a framework for implementation of continuous computing technologies for improving business continuity. The framework is presented within a systemic view of developing an “always-on” enterprise information system.


2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
M'hammed Abdous ◽  
Wu He

During the past three years, we have developed and implemented an enterprise information system (EIS) to reengineer and facilitate the administrative process for preparing and teaching distance learning courses in a midsized-to-large university (with 23,000 students). The outcome of the implementation has been a streamlined and efficient process which has delivered higher faculty satisfaction at a substantial cost reduction. In this paper, we propose a new conceptual and operational framework for process reengineering (PR) in higher education institutions. We also share our practical experience gained while designing, developing, and integrating three subsystems into an EIS. We hope that our experience,delineated in this paper, will help other universities’ distance learning efforts and will encourage them to implement enterprise information systems to effectively manage their administrative processes.


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