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John A. Zachman (born December 16, 1934) is an American business and IT consultant, [1] early pioneer of enterprise architecture, chief executive officer of Zachman ...
Beside the frameworks developed by John Zachman, numerous extensions and/or applications have been developed, which are also sometimes called Zachman Frameworks, however they generally tend to be graphical overlays of the actual framework itself. The Zachman Framework summarizes a collection of perspectives involved in enterprise architecture.
Based on the Business Systems Planning (BSP) approach developed by John Zachman, EAP takes a data-centric approach to architecture planning to provide data quality, access to data, adaptability to changing requirements, data interoperability and sharing, and cost containment. This view counters the more traditional view that applications should ...
The first use of the term "enterprise architecture" is often incorrectly attributed to John Zachman's 1987 A framework for information systems architecture. [12] The first publication to use it was instead a National Institute of Standards (NIST) Special Publication [13] on the challenges of information system integration.
Simplified illustration of the Zachman Framework with an explanation of the rows. [18] The original framework is more advanced, see for an example here . The Zachman Framework , originally conceived by John Zachman at IBM in 1987, is a framework for enterprise architecture, which provides a formal and highly structured way of viewing and ...
Steven Zachman, 48, was charged with OWI 6, operating with restricted controlled substance in blood 6, possession of THC, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of cocaine.
In 1987, John Zachman, who was a marketing specialist at IBM, published the paper, A Framework for Information Systems Architecture. [11] The paper provided a classification scheme for artifacts that describe (at several levels of abstraction) the what, how, where, who, when and why of information systems. Given IBM already employed BSP ...
[1] John Zachman (2012) commented in this context, that "a lot of material has been written about business architecture (by some definition), going back to The Principles of Scientific Management (1911) by Frederick Taylor." [6] One of the roots of business architecture lies in the proposals for enterprise architecture made since the 1980s and ...