Thanks for the reply Adam,
What about for content management applications? I'm thinking more along the lines of the term "Enterprise CONTENT management." How is that different from regular CMS? What is it that makes a content managament package "Enterprise" level?
Thanks again,
Anul


From: Adam Fields <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Anul Rockir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [cms-list] Question about Enterprise Management
Date: Wed, 13 Nov 2002 08:45:38 -0600

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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