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Summary

Summary INF112 Chapter 1 to 4

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This document contents lecture notes and textbooks notes on Chapter1 to 4 of INF112 for the semester 1 test

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  • September 27, 2021
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  • 2021/2022
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Chapter 1: Introduction to
Information Systems
Defining information system

 What is information?
o Information is a collection of facts
o It can take many forms – text, numbers, images, audio clips and video clips are all
examples
o A closely related term is data
 These two terms are often incorrectly used interchangeably

Kn
ow
led
geation
Inform
Data
Characteristics of Valuable Information

 Valuable information should be…

o Accessible o Economical
o Complete o Relevant
o Flexible o Simple
o Secure o Reliable
o Timely o Verifiable
o Accurate



What is a system? Feedback

 A system is a set of elements or components that
interact to accomplish goals.
Output Input
 Systems have input processing mechanisms, output
and feedback
 A system processes the inputs to create outputs.
 System performance can be measured in various
Process
ways:

, o Efficiency
o Effectiveness
 A system performance standard is specific objective of the system.

Manual and Computerized Information Systems

 An information system can be
o Manual (e.g., paper-based)
o Computerized
 A computer-based information system (CBIS) is a single set of hardware, software,
databases, telecommunications, people, and procedures that are configured to collect,
manipulate, store, and process data into information.

Computer-based Information System (Contd.)

 Hardware – physical components of a CBIS
 Software – the set of ‘instructions’ that tell the hardware what to do:
o Operating systems – control the operations of hardware
o Application software – supports the completion of tasks
 Database – collection of related information
 Telecommunication – supports communication between people and devices on a network
 People – individuals that use / affected by the CBIS
 Procedures – rules & policies that guide the use of CBIS

Business Information Systems




Enterprise Systems: Transaction Processing Systems and Enterprise Resource Planning

 Enterprise systems help organisations perform and integrate important tasks, such as paying
employees and suppliers, controlling inventory, sending out invoices and ordering supplies.

,  Transaction Processing Systems- any business-related exchange, such as, payments to
employees, sales to customers and payments to suppliers.
 Enterprise Resource Planning- a set of integrated programs capable of managing a company’s
vital business operations for an entire multisite, global organisation.

MIS and DSS

 Management Information Systems (MIS)
o An organised collection of people, procedure, software, databases and devices that
provides routine information to managers and decision makers.
o Focuses on operational efficiency.
 Decision Support Systems (DSS)
o An organised collection of people, procedure, software, databases and devices used to
support problem- specific decision making.
o Focus of a DSS is on making effective decisions

Knowledge Management, Artificial Intelligence, Expert Systems and Virtual Reality

 Knowledge Management Systems (KMSs) an organised collection of people, procedure,
software, data bases and device to create store share and use the organisation’s knowledge and
experience.
 Artificial Intelligence (AI) The ability of computer systems to mimic or duplicate the functions or
characteristic of the human brain or intelligence.
 Learning systems
o Robotics is an area of AI in which machines take over complex, dangerous, routine or
boring tasks
o Visual systems allow robots and other devices to ‘see’, store and process visual images.
 Expert Systems- a system that gives a computer the ability to make suggestions and act like
expert in a particular field or hardware and software that stores knowledge and makes
inferences like a human expert.
 Virtual Reality – the simulation of a real or imagined environment that can be experienced
visually in 3 dimensions.

Systems Development

 Systems development is the activity of creating or modifying business systems
 Systems Investigation and Analysis
o The first two steps of systems development are systems investigation and analysis
o The goal of systems investigation is to gain a clear understanding of the problem to be
solved or opportunity to be addressed.
 Systems Design, Implementation and maintenance and review
o Systems design determines how the new system will work to meet the business needs
defined during systems analysis
o Systems implementation involves creating or acquiring the various system components
(hardware, software, databases) defined in the design step, assembling them and
putting the new system into operation.

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