Management Information Systems

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Transcript Management Information Systems

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Chapter 7
The Internet, Intranets,
and Extranets
Management Information Systems, Second Edition
Effy Oz
Learning Objectives
 When you finish this chapter, you will
 Know what the Internet is.
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 Know the features for information exchange that
can be conducted over the World Wide Web.
 Understand how the Web facilitates electronic
commerce.
 Be able to generate basic ideas for new business
ventures utilizing the Web.
 Appreciate the major risks and limitations of using
the Web for business activities.
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What is the Internet?
 The Development of the Internet
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 ARPANET was an open system designed
for the free flow of information, but
available only to members of academic
institutions and some of the defense
industry.
 U.S. government decided to split the
network into a civilian one and a military
one.
 Civilian network became the Internet
 Internet is now a network of networks.
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What is the Internet?
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Figure 7.1 The Internet connects millions of servers.
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What is the Internet?
 Growth of the Internet
 Number of servers
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 From a few hundred in 1993, to more than 43,000,000
by mid-1999
 Number of users
 More than 200 million; increased rapidly during 1999
 Commercial Online Services
 Companies like America Online provide “online”
service to paying subscribers on their private
networks.
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What is the Internet?
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Figure 7.2 World growth of the Internet
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What is the Internet?
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Figure 7.3 The number of Internet domain servers
continues to grow
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Internet Domains
 A domain name is assigned to each IP
number.
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 Internet servers are grouped into
different domains.
 Domain names are registered by one of
a group of companies authorized to
assign unique names.
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Internet Domains
Figure 7.4 Examples of
Internet address
suffixes
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Internet Domains
 What’s on the Internet?
 E-mail and file transfer
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 News groups
 Internet Relay Chat (IRC)
 Telephoning on the Web
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The World Wide Web
 Hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP)
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 Allows shared communication of text, fullcolor graphics, tables, forms, video, and
animation
 Hypertext Mark-Up Language (HTML)
 Code for tagging Web files for display
 Browsers
 Software to access the Web
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The World Wide Web
 Creating Web Files
 HTML
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 System of standardized “tags” that format elements text,
graphics, and animation
 Web page editors
 Translate well-known or intuitive commands into code
 Java, ActiveX, and XML
 Web scripting languages
 Common Gateway Interfaces (CGI) and Forms
 Allow a computer that is accessing a particular Web site
to have some similar functions
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The World Wide Web
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Figure 7.5 How a CGI works
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The World Wide Web
 Frames
 Sections of a Web page that let a browser explore a site in
different ways on the same page
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 VRML (Virtual Reality Modeling Language)
 Standard for describing interactive three-dimensional
scenes delivered across the Internet
 Cookies
 Special file a Web site saves on the surfer’s hard disk so
the site can remember something about the surfer later
 Creating Your Own Web Pages
 Search the Web for HTML tutorials
 View and study the source document of a Web page
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Intranets and Extranets
 Intranet
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 A within-organization computer network
that uses Internet technologies to
communicate
 Extranet
 Uses Internet technologies to facilitate
communication and trade between an
organization and its business partners,
such as suppliers
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Intranets and Extranets
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Figure 7.6 An
intranet, an
extranet, and the
Internet from an
individual user’s
perspective
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Intranets and Extranets
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Figure 7.7 Internet, intranet, and extranet potential for
productivity enhancement
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Intranets
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Figure 7.8 Savings resulting from the Internet, intranet, and
extranet e-commerce
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Establishing a Web Site
 Site Name
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 Points of Presence
 Line Capacity
 Site Maintenance
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Establishing a Web Site
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Figure 7.9 Transfer times of a 10-MB file by different media
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Business on the Internet
 Business-to-Business Trading
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 Electronic Data Interchange
 Exchanges and Auctions
 E-catalogs
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Business on the Internet
 Business-to-Consumer Trading
 Advertising
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 Portals
 Free Internet applications
 E-Shopping






E-Payment
Auctions and reverse auctions
Selling content
Selling software
Data push
Stock trading for all
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Business on the Internet
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Figure 7.10 Web-shopping benefits
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Business on the Internet
 Web Demographics
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Figure 7.11 Estimated unique visitors to individual Web sites
during 8/09/99-8/15/99
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Business Considerations
 Web Costs
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 The least costly sites are those constructed
simply to showcase the company’s
products or services.
 The most expensive sites are those
designed to enable electronic commerce.
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Business Considerations
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Figure 7.12 The average cost to a company offering a Web site
for electronic commerce
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Business Considerations
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Figure 7.13
Do’s and
Don’ts in
Web site
construction
for
commercial
purposes
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Business Considerations
 Risks to Organizations
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 Computer viruses
 Interception of passwords and codes by an
unauthorized hacker
 Interception of charge account numbers
 Illegal or socially objectionable use of a site
 Potential misrepresentation
 Risks to Consumers
 Eavesdropping and interception
 Misrepresentation
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The Nations:
Who is on the Net?
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 While the U.S. is leading in developing
new technologies for the Net, other
nations are not far behind.
 Finland has the highest ratio of Internet servers to
users.
 Israeli companies are heavily involved in
developing high-quality Internet phone software.
 Singapore’s government has invested over $2 billion
in state-of-the-art technology infrastructure.
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The Nations:
Who is on the Net?
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Finland
U.S.
Australia
Canada
Netherlands
Singapore
Britain
Germany
Israel
Hong Kong
25
50
60
70
90
125
130
180
185
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Japan
Taiwan
South Africa
South Korea
Brazil
Thailand
Indonesia
China
India
470
850
930
1,550
8,000
15,000
87,000
561,000
1,200,000
Source: Network Wizards; Killen & Associates, 1997.
Figure 7.14 The number of citizens per Internet server
around the world
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Ethical and Societal Issues
Road Bumps on the Electronic Superhighway
 Free Speech
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 From the advent of the Web,
‘inappropriate’ material has been posted
and disseminated throughout the world.
 There have been calls to sensor what is
transmitted, especially pornography,
violence, and racial slurs.
 Spamming
 Flooding a party’s e-mail box with
messages as a means of protest is
disruptive.
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