On Wed, Nov 13, 2002 at 02:30:34PM +0000, Anul Rockir wrote:
> What exactly is "Enterprise Management?"
Getting Wesley to not appear in the new mov- oh, that's not what you
meant.
"Enterprise Management" usually refers to data, processes, procedures,
and servers for coordinating data, processes and servers across "an
enterprise" - that is, for multiple possibly disparate departments
that may have different needs, storage, capacity, and
whatnot. Historically, this has often involved a centralized massive
database and possibly application servers, but trends are moving
towards more coordination between autonomous units.
Generally, for applications, this implies machine-readable directories
of resources and instructions for how to get them and translate them.
Generally, for administration, this implies centralized management.
--
- Adam
-----
Adam Fields, Managing Partner, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Surgam, Inc. is a technology consulting firm with strong background in
delivering scalable and robust enterprise web and IT applications.
http://www.adamfields.com
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