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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
8 pages in length. The expansive nature of enterprise systems in contemporary commerce represents the ever-growing application of technological advancement in virtually every aspect of operation. When large corporations and small companies alike implement enterprise systems, they do so with the expectation of reliability and integrity, a duality that if does not exist even in the most seemingly insignificant areas can sabotage the very objective each business seeks to attain. 5 pages of text, 3 pages of annotated bibliography with 11 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCEnterprise.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
they do so with the expectation of reliability and integrity, a duality that if does not exist even in the most seemingly insignificant areas can sabotage the very objective each
business seeks to attain. Reliability, which is defined as "the assurance of the integrity and consistency of the application and all of its transactions" (Office Vision, 2002), can readily be
considered the cornerstone to a well functioning enterprise system (Ball, 2005); without the ability to maintain synchronization of the hardware, networking, operating system, storage subsystem, application framework and application software
(Office Vision, 2002), the enterprise system would not only cease to operate, but this incompatibility issue would become a tremendous detriment to the companys entire operation.
When it comes to issues of reliability and integrity in enterprise systems, UNIX and NT have come to represent two of the industrys fiercest competitors. As
one of the most important aspects of comparison between the two, reliability continues to remain at the top of the list; one major concern with the NT system has long
been this very aspect. Industry analysts have noted a substantial number of consumer problems associated with NT, particularly as it relates to networked applications. One-time senior technical support
specialist George Szatkowski contends the operation he oversaw had "nothing but trouble" (Kapustka, 1997, p. 1) with the NT system since the mass-transit operation first implemented it. Installed side
by side with the already existing OS/2 and Unix servers, Szatkowski maintained it did not operate anywhere near the level of reliability he experienced with the other systems.
Coupled with reliability and integrity is the concept of security, one of the most dangerous aspects of a malfunctioning system (Anonymous, 2002). From an
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