Health.Zone Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the Health.Zone Content Network
  2. Enterprise social networking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterprise_social_networking

    Enterprise social networking focuses on the use of online social networks or social relations among people who share business interests and/or activities. Enterprise social networking is often a facility of enterprise social software (regarded as a primary component of Enterprise 2.0 ), which is essentially social software used in "enterprise ...

  3. Computer network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_network

    The equipment that ties together the departmental networks constitutes the network backbone. Another example of a backbone network is the Internet backbone, which is a massive, global system of fiber-optic cable and optical networking that carry the bulk of data between wide area networks (WANs), metro, regional, national and transoceanic networks.

  4. Intranet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intranet

    An intranet is a computer network for sharing information, easier communication, collaboration tools, operational systems, and other computing services within an organization, usually to the exclusion of access by outsiders. [1] The term is used in contrast to public networks, such as the Internet, but uses the same technology based on the ...

  5. List of Cisco products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Cisco_products

    Products in this category are Cisco's range of routers, switches, wireless systems, security systems, WAN acceleration hardware, energy and building management systems and media aware network equipment. [1][2] IP video and phones, TelePresence, HealthPresence, unified communications, call center systems, enterprise social networks and Mobile ...

  6. Business network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_network

    A business network is a complex, enduring, and interdependent web of business relationships among market and non-market actors that allow firms to co-create value in their business environment. [1][2] Firms influence their markets by managing and signalling their network positions, [3] facilitating entry of new actors, or removing other actors ...

  7. Enterprise integration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterprise_Integration

    Enterprise Integration is focused on optimizing operations in a world which could be considered full of continuous and largely unpredictable change. Changes occur in single manufacturing companies just as well as in an "everchanging set of extended or virtual enterprises".

  8. Enterprise service bus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterprise_service_bus

    An enterprise service bus (ESB) implements a communication system between mutually interacting software applications in a service-oriented architecture (SOA). It represents a software architecture for distributed computing, and is a special variant of the more general client-server model, wherein any application may behave as server or client.

  9. Collaborative network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative_network

    A collaborative network is a network consisting of a variety of entities (e.g. organizations and people) that are largely autonomous, geographically distributed, and heterogeneous in terms of their operating environment, culture, social capital and goals, but that collaborate to better achieve common or compatible goals, and whose interactions are supported by computer networks.