Commerce, Creation and Information Technology
The majority of world commerce today relies on Information Technology. From the accounting software that handles your accounts and payroll to your Web page, business is increasingly supported by IT services and infrastructure. But like all good tools, IT is limited by our understanding of it and the uses it is given by us.
Looking at a model of Information Technology or IT Services and its infrastructure, it may not be surprising to find a correlation between the creation and its creator. More than that, it is a hologram of the creator. There are obvious similarities to hardware and parts of human anatomy. There is a central processor, like the brain. Information travels throughout the computer by wiring similar to nerve axons. Input units, like the mouse, the keyboard etc. are similar to human senses which gather information. But take it to the next level and you will see a labyrinth of reflections, each mirroring the other in form and function.
In the beginning there was ENIAC, a monstrous, modular computing giant which, for all its speed and mathematical prowess, could not retain a program. It was a brain with no memory. It was fed and spit out punch cards. Technology advanced to Main Frame computers with dumb terminals. These behemoths gave off so much heat that they had to be cooled with water.
Like their counterparts in the biological world, computers have evolved to suit the current climate. They are sleek, powerful, and in addition to individual applications, are designed to share data and services. The mainframes, themselves have evolved into servers, supporting the brave new Pantheon: a celestial convergence of power and knowledge, delivered in the blink of an eye.
We are the masters of super-intelligent minions whose astonishing abilities are limited only by our own ignorance, or lack of creativity. We stand on the brink of : “Your wish is my command” capability. Power of this kind is best used when balanced with knowledge and wisdom.
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MAKING SENSE OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
MAKING SENSE OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Book Review by Vikram Karve
Title: Information, Systems and Information Systems – making sense of the field
Authors: Peter Checkland and Sue Howell
John Wiley & Sons (1988)
ISBN 0-471-95820-4
Information Technology ( IT ) is the buzzword of today.
IT is ubiquitous.
Today you are connected with IT in some way or the other, in fact IT is an integral part of our lives, and everyone seems to be rushing to join the IT bandwagon.
A few years ago, till the 1980s, there were courses in Electrical, Electronics, Communications and Telecommunications Engineering and later in Computer Science and Engineering, but now there are dedicated courses specifically in Information Technology, and almost all Engineers, and even pure scientists and others, irrespective of their specializations, are rushing away from their “core” academic disciplines to take up jobs in IT and IT Enabled Services.
The Management guys have also joined the fray and added a “management” dimension to IT by offering MBA courses in “IT Management”.
What exactly is IT…?
Maybe the phrase Information Technology or “IT” was coined to mark the convergence of two technologies that had been traditionally separate: “Computing” and “Communications” and the confluence of several streams of development including electronics, microelectronics, computer science, telecommunications, software engineering and systems analysis.
There are a large number of books and extensive literature on the content of Information Technology.
This book is a significant treatise on the context of Information Technology.
The principal author Peter Checkland is a pioneering researcher in the field of Systems Engineering and Management and has developed breakthrough concepts like Soft Systems Methodology [SSM] and written the seminal classic “Systems Thinking, Systems Practice”. The co-author Sue Holwell has a rich and varied professional experience in systems design and implementation, information strategy and communication networks.
This book has eight chapters arranged in four parts.
In the first part on “The Field of Information Systems and its Problems” the authors deliberate on the basic concepts pertaining to Information Systems [IS] and Information Technology [IT], distinguish between the “Hard” (objective positivistic scientific) and “Soft” (subjective interpretative) schools of thought in the context of Management Information Systems [MIS], and introduce the reader to the fundamentals of Soft System Methodologies [SSM].
The “meat” of the book is in Part Two whose two chapters elucidate on the application of the developed Information System Management concepts to organizations and describe the “information continuum” – the linkages between data, information and knowledge.
Parts Three and Four of the book substantiate these hypotheses with experiential examples from as early as World War II and drives home the point that the evolution and development of the science of Information Systems [IS] owes nothing to computers which did not exist in 1940, makes it clear that IS is not the same as IT, reminds us that computers are a mere means of IS, and cautions us against falling into the trap of “technological determinism” resulting from the prevalent propensity to overly focus on computer-based IT and allow technology to take charge of our actions.
The book is aptly adorned with simple illustrations which facilitate ease of understanding.
As the dust jacket says, the book is a work of conceptual cleansing and presents a well-argued account of IS and IT which is both holistic and coherent.
I recommend this remarkable book to students of Information Technology, Engineering and Management, Practising Engineers, Managers and Teaching Faculty and IT Professionals – reading this unique book will certainly enhance your conceptual understanding of Information Systems and Technology.
Book Review by Vikram Karve
http://www.linkedin.com/in/karve
VIKRAM KARVE educated at IIT Delhi, ITBHU and The Lawrence School Lovedale, is an Electronics and Communications Engineer by profession, a Human Resource and Training Manager by occupation, a Teacher by vocation, a Creative Writer by inclination and a Foodie by passion. An avid blogger, he has written a number of fiction short stories and creative non-fiction articles in magazines and journals for many years before the advent of blogging. His delicious foodie blogs have been compiled in a book “Appetite for a Stroll”. Vikram lives in Pune with his family and pet Doberman girl Sherry, with whom he takes long walks thinking creative thoughts. Vikram Karve Creative Writing Blog – http://vikramkarve.sulekha.com Email: vikramkarve@sify.com
