E Business Infrastructure

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E-business infrastructure 

refers to the combination of hardware such as servers and


client. PCs in an organization, the network used to link this hardware and the software
applications. used to deliver services to workers within the e-business and also to its
partners and. customers.

Technology for E-Business:


Infrastructure for E-Business:

1. E-business infrastructure: The architecture of hardware. software, content and data


used to deliver e-business services to employees. customers and partners. deploying
IT serves two distinct roles - as a catalyst for innovative ideas and as an engine for
delivering them.
2. E-business infrastructure refers to the combination of hardware such as servers and
clients PCs in an organization, the network used to link this hardware and the
software applications used to deliver services to workers within the e-business and
also to its partners and customers.
3. Infrastructure also includes the architecture of the networks, hardware and software
and where it is located. Finally, infrastructure can also be considered to indude the
methods for publishing data and documents accessed through e-business applications.
A key decision with managing this infrastructure is which elements are located within
the company and which are managed externally as third-party managed applications,
data servers and networks.
4. It is also important that the e-business infrastructure and the process of reviewing new
technology investments be flexible enough to support changes required by the
business to compete effectively. For example, for the media there are many new
technologies being developed which were described from 2005 onwards as Web 2.0
and IPTV (television deliv-ered over the broadband Internet). but for now look at the
implications in the Real-world e-business experiences interview and consider the
implications for the newspaper publishing industry.
5. Figure 3.1 summarizes how the different components of e-business architecture which
need to be managed relate to each other. The different components can be conceived
of as different layers with defined interfaces between each layer.
The different layers can best be understood in relation to a typical task performed by a
user of an e-business system. For example, an employee who needs to book a holiday
will aces a specific human resources application or program that has been created to
enable the holiday to be booked (Level I in Figure 3.1).
This application will enable a holiday request to be entered and will forward the application
to their manager and human resources department for approval. To access the application, the
employee will use a web browser such as Microsoft Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox or
Google Chrome using an operating system such as Microsoft Windows XP or Apple OS X
(Level II in Figure 3.1).
This systems software will then request transfer of the information about the holiday request
across a network or transport layer (Level III in Figure 3.1).
The information will then be stored in computer memory (RAM) or in long-term magnetic
storage on a web server (Level IV in Figure 3.1).
The information itself which makes up the web pages or content viewed by the employee and
the data about their holiday request are shown as a separate layer (Level Vin Figure 3.1),
although it could be argued that this is the first or second level in an e-business architecture.
Kampas (2000) describes an alternative five-level infrastructure model of what he refers to as
'the information system function chain':
1. Storage/physical: Memory and disk hardware components (equivalent to Level IV in
Figure 3.1).
2. Processing: Computation and logic provided by the processor (processing occurs at
Levels I and II in Figure 3.1).
3. Infrastructure: This refers to the human and external interfaces and also the
network, referred to as `extrastructure. (This is Level III in Figure 3.1, although the
human or external interfaces are not shown there.)
4. Application/content: This is the data processed by the application into information.
(This is Level V in Figure 3.1.)
5. Intelligence: Additional computer-based logic that transforms information to
knowledge.
Each of these elements of infrastructure presents separate management issues e-business
infrastructure have the technical infrastructure for the Internet, extranets, intranets and the
World Wide Web which are Levels II and III in Figure 3.1. We then look at how these
facilities work by reviewing the standards that are used to enable electronic communications,
including communications standards such as TCP/IP and EDI and publishing standards such
as HTML and XML.
some management issues of hosting e-business services are then reviewed, specifically
management of Level I applications and services by external parties and how to manage staff
access to the Internet. Finally, we focus on how new access platforms such as mobile phones
and interactive digital TV will change the way the Internet is used in the future (Level II in
Figure 3.1).

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