Lecture #1
Lecture #1
CIS
CIS 3003
3003 Fundamentals
Fundamentals of
ofInformation
InformationTechnology
Technology
1
Chapter 1
Introduction to
Information Technology
Objectives
• Define
e e “information”
o at o and a d understand
u de sta d the
t e four
ou
methods of representing and conveying information
1
1/11/2010
Objectives (continued)
Defining Information
• Defining “information” is not straightforward
– A fact or series of facts that carry meaning
– The value of these facts strongly depends on context
• Examples of information
– Spam
– 911 emergency call
– Air traffic control map
– Text message
– Instructions for building a bomb
– Sports scores
Information Technology in Theory 4
2
1/11/2010
3
1/11/2010
4
1/11/2010
5
1/11/2010
6
1/11/2010
Two IT Examples
Cellular Telephony
7
1/11/2010
8
1/11/2010
IT-Enabled Activities
9
1/11/2010
10
1/11/2010
11
1/11/2010
12
1/11/2010
13
1/11/2010
14
1/11/2010
15
1/11/2010
16
1/11/2010
17
1/11/2010
Computer/IT Analyst
• T
Translate
l t business
b i requirements
i t into
i t technical
t h i l
specifications
• Work with business units to document
requirements
• Support end-user desktop applications,
a dwa e, and
hardware, a d shared
s a ed systems
syste s
• Train employees who use these systems
18
1/11/2010
Network Administration
Management Consulting
• IT consultants work as part of a team on
limited term engagements for clients
limited-term
• Involves considerable travel
• Some consultants specialize in specific
industries
• Some consultants specialize in specific
technologies
h l i
19
1/11/2010
Database Administration
• Businesses have database management
systems that track thousands,
thousands millions,
millions or
billions of records.
• Database administrators design, create, and
maintain these computer systems
• Requires programming skills such as SQL
and familiarity with specific database
products such as those created by Oracle,
Microsoft, or Sybase
Computer Forensics
20
1/11/2010
IT Sales
Software Development
• Programming opport
opportunities
nities eexist
ist in eevery
er industry
ind str
• Programming touches upon every type of information
exchange: music, video, images, voice, etc.
• Requires skills like C++ and Java
21
1/11/2010
• “IT activists”
• Non-profit groups
• Think tanks
• Lobbyists for corporations
• Marketing engineers for IT companies
• M k t researchers
Market h
• Regional
i l differences
diff
• Overall economic conditions
• Geopolitical circumstances
• Industry trends
• O s o g
“Offshoring”
22
1/11/2010
Summary
• Information Technology in Theory
– Introduces students to IT concepts
– Explains computational methods in IT
– Explores social issues in IT
• Information is represented in four ways
– Text, numbers, images (including video), and sound
Summary (continued)
• IT hardware and software can capture, process,
exchange store,
exchange, store and present various types of
information using electrical, magnetic, or
electromagnetic energy
• Cutting-edge IT trends include technologies that
are secure, high-speed, interoperable, mobile,
small, and user controlled
23