Term
Properties of Information (Digital) Goods** |
|
Definition
Info-Based, big fixed cost, small or negligible variable cost, easy versioning and pricing |
|
|
Term
Versioning of Digital Goods** |
|
Definition
- Many variations of essentially the same goods
- Charge as many people as possible the price as high as possible
- Theoretical basis: price discrimination
- Capturing consumer surplus
- Information goods: versioning is much easier
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Examples
- Comprehensiveness & convenience (WSJ, Lexis-Nexis)
- Annoyance (Winzip)
- Speed (Comcast, Verizon)
- Bonus Features (DVD's)
- Free Versions
- Awareness (Half-Life)
- Follow-up sale (McAfee, RedHat Linux)
- Advertisement (File Sharing Sites)
- Comp. Advantage (Internet Explorer, Adobe)
|
|
|
Term
Business Application of Versioning*
|
|
Definition
- Extreme Aversion
- Microwave experiment
- Two versions: 45% for midrange
- Three versions: 60% for midrange
- Vaue-Subtracted Version
|
|
|
Term
Categories of E-Commerce** |
|
Definition
- Business-to-customer (B2C)
- Retailing of products and services directly to individual customers (Wal-Mart.com)
- Business-to-business (B2B)
- Sale of goods and services to other businesses (Grainger.com, Alibaba.com)
- Consumer-to-consumer (C2C)
- Individuals using the Web for private sales or exchange (eBay.com)
|
|
|
Term
B2C Advantages of E-Commerce** |
|
Definition
- Disintermediation
- the elimination of organizations or business process layers responsible for certain intermediary steps in a value chain, reducing costs to the consumer
- Reintermediation
- the shifting of the intermediary role in a value chain to a new source, adding additonal value to the consumer
|
|
|
Term
B2B E-Commerce: New efficiencies and relationships** |
|
Definition
- Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
- Enables the computer-to-computer exchange between two organizations of standard transactions. Currently 80% of B2B e-commerce uses this system
- EDI is being replaced by more powerful Web-Based alternatives
|
|
|
Term
Consumer-to-Consumer Commerce* |
|
Definition
- Online Marketplace
- Peer-to-Peer Commerce
- Auction sites: eBay, uBid, iOffer, uCrater
- Other Auctions
- Dutch auction & Reverse auction
- Penny auction: swoopo.com, bidray.com
|
|
|
Term
E-Commerce Payment Systems (Credit Cards)** |
|
Definition
Visa, MasterCard, AmEx, Discover |
|
|
Term
E-Commerce Payment Systems (Digital Wallets)** |
|
Definition
Electronic storage of ID and digital cash, e.g. Google Checkout |
|
|
Term
E-Commerce Payment Systems (Accumulated Balance)** |
|
Definition
Used for micro payments, similar to monthly telephone bills |
|
|
Term
E-Commerce Payment Systems (Stored Value)** |
|
Definition
Pre-payment of funds, debited on use, such as Husky card, smart card |
|
|
Term
E-Commerce Payment Systems (Digial Checking)** |
|
Definition
Electronic checks with digital signatures, such as PayByCheck |
|
|
Term
E-Commerce Payment Systems (Electronic billing presentment and payment)** |
|
Definition
used by consumers to pay bills online, provided by many banks |
|
|
Term
Electronic Accounting Machine* |
|
Definition
First computers, extremely expensive, took up entire rooms. Only people who would use them were accountants and other people who needed an easy way to do lots of number crunching |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Personal computers. People all over the world have computers at home. Consists of a monitor, computer, speakers, keyboard and mouse. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- CPU = Brain
- Memory = Sketchpad
- Hard Drive = Memory
- Mouse, keyboard, mic, touch screen & other input devices = Senses
- Monitor, printer, speaker & other output devices = Communication and expression
- Motherboard = Backbone, skeleton
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Sequences of 1's and 0's
- Computers recognize them as on or off signals
- Each number is a bit
- Byte = 8 bits
- Word = 16 bigs, 2 bytes
|
|
|
Term
KB, MB, GB, TB, PB, and Beyond** |
|
Definition
- 8 bits (b) = 1 Byte (B)
- 1000 B = 1 KB
- 1000 KB = 1 MB
- 1000 MB = 1 GB
- 1000 GB= 1 TB
- 1000 TB = 1 PB
- EB, ZB, YB...
|
|
|
Term
Popular Transmission Media/Speed** |
|
Definition
- Twisted Wire @ 10 Mbps
- Coxial Cable @ 500 Mbps
- Fiber Optics and Optical Networks @ >2 Gbps
- Wireless Transmission @ 54 Mbps
- USB Cable @ 480 Mbps
- SATA Cable @ 3 Gbps
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Binary => Decimal***
10101010 |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Decimal=>Binary, Top-Down*** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Decimal=>Binary, Bottom-Up*** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Number-Text Conversion: ASCII Code** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Computing Power vs. Demand** |
|
Definition
- Data Processing
- Sequential vs. Parallel
- 32-bit vs. 64-bit
- MIPS = Million Instructions per Second
- 3.2 GHz = 3,200 MIPS
- Application Example: CGI & CPU
|
|
|
Term
Moore's Law and Microprocessor Performance** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
General-purpose mainframe and minicomputer era (1959-present)** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Personal computer era (1981-present)** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Client/server era (1983-present)** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Enterprise internet computing era (1992-present)** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Cloud computing era (2000-present) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
On-demand and Autonomic Computing* |
|
Definition
- Website Capacity and Resource Allocation
- On-Demand computing
- Cloud Computing
- Autonomic Computing
- Self-updating, self-debugging programs
|
|
|
Term
Grid Computing: SETI@Home** |
|
Definition
- SETI: Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence
- Grid computing uses lots of small computers all working simultaniously on different parts of analysis
|
|
|
Term
Local Area Network (LAN)** |
|
Definition
Upto 500 meters (1/2 a mile); an office or floor of a building |
|
|
Term
Campus Area Network (CAN)** |
|
Definition
Up to 1,000 meters (a mile); a college campus or corporate facility |
|
|
Term
Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)** |
|
Definition
A city or metropolitan area |
|
|
Term
Wide Area Network (WAN)** |
|
Definition
Transcontinental or global area |
|
|
Term
Network Topologies (Star)**
(most robust and secure) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Network Topologies (Ring)** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Network Topologies (Bus)** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Every Device connected to the Internet has a unique 32-bit numeric IP address
- A Domain Name System (DNS) converts IP addresses to English-like domain names
- The domain name is the name that corresponds to the unique 32-bit numeric IP address for each computer connectd to the internet
- DNS servers maintain a database containing IP addresses mapped to their corresponding names
- To access a computer on the internet, users need only specify is domain name
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Limitations on IP Addresses: IPv4 |
|
Definition
Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4): A 32-bit string of numbers organized into four sets of numbers ranging from 0-255; contains up to 4 billion addresses |
|
|
Term
Limitations on IP Addresses: IPv6** |
|
Definition
Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6): 128-bit addresses, contains over a quadrillion possible unique addresses |
|
|
Term
The Need for IPv6 Addressing* |
|
Definition
- Scarcity of IPv4 addresses
- Total IPv4 addresses: 232=4,294,967,296
- 4.2 billion vs 6.3 (still growing) world pop.
- Ubiquitous computing and IP address demand
- Uneven distribution of IPv4 addresses
- UW was allocated a Class A IP address space, which includes 65,000 addresses, many more than the university needed
- Stanford University has 17 million addresses, vs. 2 million for India with more than 1 billion population
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- IPv6 uses 16 byte addresses, i.e. 128 bit:
- How big is it?
- beyond our imagination
- for every square meter of the earth's surface, it provides 6.5x1023 addresses
- 18 ml of water has 6.02x1023 molecules
|
|
|
Term
Major Internet Services (E-Mail)** |
|
Definition
Person to person messaging, document sharing |
|
|
Term
Major Internet Services (Newsgroups)** |
|
Definition
Discussion groups on electonic bulletin boards |
|
|
Term
Major Internet Services (Chatting and instant messaging)**
|
|
Definition
Interactive conversations |
|
|
Term
Major Internet Services (Telnet)**
|
|
Definition
Logging on to one computer system and doing work on another |
|
|
Term
Major Internet Services (FTP)**
|
|
Definition
Transferring files from computer to computer |
|
|
Term
Major Internet Services (World Wide Web)**
|
|
Definition
Retrieving, formatting and displaying information (including text, audio, graphics, and video) using hypertext links |
|
|
Term
Major Web Server Providers** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- In packet-switched networks, messages are first broken down into small bundles of data called packets
- These packets are sent along different communication paths and then the packets are reassembled once they reach their destinations
- Packet switching makes more efficient use of the communications capacity of a network
- The packets include information for directing the packet to the right address and for checking transmission erros along with the data
|
|
|
Term
Packet-Switched Communications** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
TCP/IP and Connectivity** |
|
Definition
- TCP/IP is the communications protocol used by the Internet and all Internet devices
- TCP/IP provides from breaking up digital messages into packets, routing them to the proper addresses, and then reassembling them into coherent messages.
- TCP/IP uses a suite of protocols: TCP and IP
|
|
|
Term
Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)** |
|
Definition
- Handles the movement of data between computers
- Establishes a connection between the computers, sequences the transfer of packets, and acknowledges the packets sent
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Responsible for the delivery of packets
- Includes the disassembling and reassembling of packets during transmission
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Medium for Wireless Communication: Electromagnetic Wave
- Like regular wave that oscillates, with amplitude, wavelength, frequency and phase
- Virtues
- Travels at light speed
- needs no physical medium
- Propagates in all directions
- some can penetrate/circumvent obstacles
- others need LOS
- Delivers energy and power
|
|
|
Term
Devices of Electromagnetic waves* |
|
Definition
- Entertainment
- Radio: AM, FM, XM
- Ditital TV: National and local channels
- Communication
- Telephone: Cell phone, 4G, EDGE, Cordless phone
- Data communication: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Wi-Max
- Analog Communication: Walkie Talkie, beeper, baby monitor
- Others
- Military: Radar, satellite, GPS
- Medical: X-Ray machine, MRI
- Home: Microwave, stud finder
- Security: Full-body scanner, metal detector
- Law Enforcement: Speed gun
- Products using light: Remote control, laser, projector
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Referring to the Electromagnetic Wave of 30 Mhz to 3000 Mhz
- Right next to visible light
- On the low end of larger electromagnetic spectrum
- Virtues of the Prime Spectrum
- Easily penetrates walls
- Slow attenuation
- Travels long distance with low power
- Long battery life and slim design
- Same spectrum can be reused in multiple locations
- One of the most valuable natural resources in the information age
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Cellular Network Standards** |
|
Definition
- Global System for Mobile Communication (GSM)
- T-Mobile and ATT Wireless
- Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)
- Virtually equal quality
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- 1G: analog Cellular networks for voice communication
- 2G: Digital wireless networks, primarily for voice communication; limited data transmission capability
- 3G: High speed; mobile; supports video and other rich media; always-on transmission for e-mail, web browsing, instant messaging
- 3.9G: interim state before 4G
- 4G: Packet-switching; fastest; mobility support
|
|
|
Term
IEEE's Wireless Standards** |
|
Definition
Global Wireless Network Standards
- IEEE 802.15 (Bluetooth) for the Personal Area Network (PAN)
- IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi) for the Local Area Network (LAN)
- IEEE 802.16 (WiMax) for the Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)
- IEEE 802.20 (proposed) standard for the Wide Area Network (WAN)
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Can link up to 8 devices in 10-meter area: PAN
- Low power requirements
- Replacing cables: remote, headset, earphone, etc.
- Transmission speed @ 3 Mbps (million bits per second)
|
|
|
Term
Major WiFi Standards (IEEE 802.11a)**
|
|
Definition
operates in the 5 GHz band and be capabale of data rates of up to 54 Mbps, but will probably average about 20Mbps in practice |
|
|
Term
Major Wi-Fi Standards (IEEE 802.11b)** |
|
Definition
uses 2.4GHz band, transmit at 11 Mbps, ranging 120 ft |
|
|
Term
Major Wi-Fi Standards (IEEE 802.11g)* |
|
Definition
uses 2.4 GHz band and OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) encoding, and can transmit at 54 Mbps |
|
|
Term
Major Wi-Fi Standards (IEEE 802.11n)**
|
|
Definition
uses 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz, transmit at 300 Mbps with a range of 230 feet |
|
|
Term
Wireless Supply Chain Management (WSCM)* |
|
Definition
Provide simultaneous accurate information about demand, supply, production, and logistics as goods move along supply chain partners |
|
|
Term
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) systems* |
|
Definition
Provide a powerful technology for tracking the movement of goods throughout the supply chain |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
M-Commerece Services and Applications** |
|
Definition
- Location-based services
- Banking and financial services
- Wireless Advertising
- Games and entertainment
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
The use of the Internet for purchasing goods and services and also for transmitting messages using wireless mobile devices |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Confidentiality
- The improper disclosure of information
- i.e. Tom Cruise stealing NARC info in MI
- Integrity
- The improper modification of data
- i.e. hacking grade system and changing grades
- Availability
- the unauthorized denial of service to data
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Deinal of Service
- Attacking the availability aspect of the system
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- Crashing
- causing the whole system to crash so no one can access it
- Flooding
- flooding the site or system with too many requests to make it crash
|
|
|
Term
Flooding with Zombie Computers** |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Basic Text Encryption ROT13** |
|
Definition
|
|