Final Exam Word Bank Spring 2017 AIMS 2710

Telecommunications Electronic Business

Peer-to-Peer network Business model Client/Server network B2C Wired Media: B2B 1. Twisted-pair cable C2C 2. Fiber optic cable Pure Play Wireless Media: Click-and-Mortar 1. Infrared Marketing channel 2. Terrestrial wireless Channel conflict 3. Satellite wireless Seven Business Models Near Field Communication (NFC) 1. Commission Bandwidth 2. Advertising Network latency 3. Markup Networking Devices: 4. Manufacturer 1. Switch 5. Referral 2. Router 6. Subscription 3. Repeater 7. Utility Model 4. Access point Google AdWords SIM card Disintermediation M-commerce Dynamic Pricing Mesh network Auction Wireless interference Reverse auction Protocols  LTE (just need to know that this is a 4G standard)  Ethernet  TCP/IP  Bluetooth  Wi-Fi Open systems Proprietary systems Domain Name System (DNS) IP address  Static IP address  Dynamic IP address  Public IP address  Private IP address Packet-switched network Dynamic routing Private network Public network Virtual private network (VPN)

Page 1 Final Exam Word Bank Spring 2017 AIMS 2710

Strategic and Competitive IS Conversion Strategies  Direct Cutover Competitive advantage  Parallel First mover advantage  Pilot Sustainable competitive advantage  Piecemeal The Competitive Forces Model Scope creep Five Forces: Prototyping 1. Buyer Power Outsourcing 2. Supplier Power 3. Substitute Force Security Threats 4. New Competition Force 5. Current Competition Force Social engineering Low cost leadership Two-factor authentication Product differentiation Distributed denial of service attack (DDos) Focus on market niche Intrusion Linkage Malware Switching costs Phishing Sticky web sites Ransomware Gamification Spyware Network effects Drive-by download Value Chain Method Data encryption Primary activities Encryption key Support activities Public-key encryption Inbound logistics Disk image Outbound logistics

Developing Information Systems

Traditional SDLC  Analysis  Design  Implementation  Conversion  Production and Maintenance

Page 2