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Online Business Sourcebook is the only evaluative guide to electronic business database products and services. The arrangement of products and services within the Sourcebook is by thematic chapter, to make it easy to review all products on a specific topic: Online hosts and aggregators; The Internet; Company directories; Company financials; Investment analysis; Shareholder analysis; Credit; Mergers and acquisitions; Business and financial news; Business opportunities; Grants, advice and source of finance; Legislation and regulations; Prices; Market data; Industries; Economics and finance; Inte
Business -- Databases -- Directories. --- Business -- Directories. --- Information storage and retrieval systems -- Business -- Directories. --- Commerce --- Business & Economics --- Marketing & Sales --- Information storage and retrieval systems --- Business information services. --- Online bibliographic searching. --- Management. --- Business. --- On-line bibliographic searching --- Business --- Business enterprises --- Information services --- Electronic information resource searching --- Searching, Bibliographical --- Databases --- E-books --- Automatic data storage --- Automatic information retrieval --- Automation in documentation --- Computer-based information systems --- Data processing systems --- Data storage and retrieval systems --- Discovery systems, Information --- Information discovery systems --- Information processing systems --- Information retrieval systems --- Machine data storage and retrieval --- Mechanized information storage and retrieval systems --- Computer systems --- Electronic information resources --- Data libraries --- Digital libraries --- Information organization --- Information retrieval --- Management --- Data centers
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"Regardless of the type of architecture, architecture itself is an organized accumulation of knowledge within a particular domain. While we generally conceive of its representation as a set of diagrams, containing specific notations and taxonomies of symbols and glossary terms, an architecture may actually be represented using anything that can be arranged in a pattern to record information. The earliest forms of architecture relate to architecting buildings, monuments, military disciplines, organized religion, music, storytelling, and various other forms within the arts. These early forms of architecture of course predate computer related architectures by thousands of years. That said, it is worth noting that there are a number of common elements among architectures irrespective of their relative age, such as forms of standardization, reusable structures, the accumulation of knowledge, and providing a context for understanding something. Needless to say, anyone can be an architect in a topic in which they have a deep understanding and appreciation of. While one obvious difference among architects is the amount and variety of pertinent experience, the less obvious difference is the degree to which an architect recognizes the potential forms of standardization, reusable structures, accumulation of knowledge, relationships among the components, and use of architecture as an accelerator to more rapidly understand the context and scope of a particular topic or to rapidly convey it to another. Architectures as a result must be easy to understand"
Business enterprises -- Data processing. --- Business enterprises -- Information technology. --- Computer architecture. --- Information storage and retrieval systems -- Business. --- Management information systems. --- Organizational change. --- System design. --- Information storage and retrieval systems --- Management information systems --- Business enterprises --- System design --- Computer architecture --- Organizational change --- Commerce --- Business & Economics --- Marketing & Sales --- Business --- Data processing --- Information technology --- Business enterprises. --- Business. --- Data processing. --- Information technology. --- Change, Organizational --- Organization development --- Organizational development --- Organizational innovation --- Management --- Organization --- Manpower planning --- Architecture, Computer --- Design, System --- Systems design --- Electronic data processing --- System analysis --- Business organizations --- Businesses --- Companies --- Enterprises --- Firms --- Organizations, Business --- Computer-based information systems --- EIS (Information systems) --- Executive information systems --- MIS (Information systems) --- Sociotechnical systems --- Information resources management --- Communication systems --- Computer networks --- Design --- Business enterprises - Computer networks - Design
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