enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Service reusability principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_reusability_principle

    The service reusability principle is a design principle, applied within the service-orientation design paradigm, to create services [1] that can be reused across a business. [2] These reusable services are designed so that their solution logic is independent of any particular business process or technology.

  3. Service design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_design

    Service design is the activity of planning and arranging people, infrastructure, communication and material components of a service in order to improve its quality, and the interaction between the service provider and its users. Service design may function as a way to inform changes to an existing service or create a new service entirely.

  4. Service-orientation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service-orientation

    Service-orientation is a design paradigm for computer software in the form of services. The principles of service-oriented design stress the separation of concerns in the software. Applying service-orientation results in units of software partitioned into discrete, autonomous, and network-accessible units, each designed to solve an individual ...

  5. Service-orientation design principles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service-Orientation_Design...

    One important factor that needs to be kept in mind is that it is not just the application of these design principles alone but the consistent application [6] that guarantees the realization of the service-orientation design goals linked with the adoption of service-orientation. This is because services are an enterprise resource, i.e. giving ...

  6. List of system quality attributes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_system_quality...

    For databases reliability, availability, scalability and recoverability (RASR), is an important concept. Atomicity, consistency, isolation (sometimes integrity), durability is a transaction metric. When dealing with safety-critical systems, the acronym reliability, availability, maintainability and safety is frequently used.

  7. Requirement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Requirement

    A condition or capability needed by a stakeholder to solve a problem or achieve an objective. A condition or capability that must be met or possessed by a solution or solution component to satisfy a contract, standard, specification, or other formally imposed documents. A documented representation of a condition or capability as in (1) or (2).

  8. Capability management in business - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capability_management_in...

    Capability-based planning had long been entrenched in the defense realm in the US, UK, Australia, and Canada before it was adopted within Version 9 of The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF). [7] Capability Management has in recent years become a popular sub-discipline or method of Enterprise Architecture. Enterprise Architecture seeks to ...

  9. Capacity planning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacity_planning

    Capacity planning is the process of determining the production capacity needed by an organization to meet changing demands for its products. [1] In the context of capacity planning, design capacity is the maximum amount of work that an organization or individual is capable of completing in a given period.