SAD 1

Lecture 1 What Are Information Systems?

In This Lecture You Will Learn:

  • The Elements of an IS
  • The Role of Computer
  • System Transformation
  • General System Theory
  • Characteristics of Systems
  • Systems of the Real World

The Elements of an IS

Every IS has:

  • A human activity that needs information
  • An input method for entering data
  • Some process that turns the data into information
  • Some stored data
  • An output method for representing information

The Role of the Computer

  • Computers carry out tasks also done by people and by other technologies
    • Storage: signalman’s memory / hard disk
    • Display: battle of Britain map / PC screen
    • Calculation: mental arithmetic / program
    • Communication: telephone line / LAN
  • Typical advantages of computers:
    • high speed, low cost, reliability,etc
  • Wider questions that computer held for commercial activities.
  1. How do we establish the business requirements for a new system?
  2. What effect will the new system have on the organization?
  3. How do we ensure that the system we build will meet its requirements?

System Transformation

  • All useful systems transform their inputs into useful outputs
  • For IS, both inputs and outputs are typically information
  • This transformation is the whole reason for building and operating the system

Transformation Example

  • McGregor’s Delivery Scheduling System may have inputs:
    • Information about orders, available stock, customer addresses, vehicle capacities…
  • —and may have outputs:
    • Which orders to load on each vehicle, what route the vehicle should follow…
  • How does this benefit McGregor?

General Systems Theory

  • System
    • a very specific term
    • it is more than just computer system e.g. legal system, the system of parliamentary democracy, a reservation system, etc.
  • A system is rather more than just anything that shows a degree of organization.

Characteristics of Systems

  • Exists in an environment – situation
  • Separated from its environment by some kind of boundary.
  • Inputs and outputs – from & to different environment.
  • Interfaces – allows communication between user & the system.
  • IS are like any other kind of system
  • Every system has:
    • Inputs and outputs
    • A purpose (related to transformation)
    • A boundary and an environment
    • Sub-systems and interfaces
    • Control using feedback and feed-forward
    • Some emergent property

Parts of a system, and their relationship to each other.

  • Boundary and environment
    • Two systems may be closely related, may have identical boundary, but yet still distinct.
  • Inputs and outputs
    • Purpose of system is to transform input into output, this is how they fulfill their objectives.

Input and outputs

System Inputs Outputs
A student Information, exercise, guidance New knowledge, new ideas, solutions
A family Money, purchases, daily news New citizen, product of family member’s work
A business Raw material and labor, investment, customer order Finished products, profits and taxes, company report

Feedback

  • One or more output of the system is sampled and feed back to the control unit.
  • For example, a sensor samples the temperature in the main freezer compartment and this is feed back to the control unit.

Feed-forward

  • It relies on sampling system’s inputs rather than outputs.
  • For example, the Christmas toy business

Emergent properties

  • The system possesses some feature or ability of its own that is not present in any of its components. e.g. components of a car.

Holistic concept

  • Thinking about each system as a whole.

Systems of interest in this subject

  • System can be natural or artificial.
  • Human activity system.
System Purpose of system Different perspective
  • This subject is more concern with artificial kind of system.

Are Systems Real?

Maybe, maybe not!

  • Systems thinking is useful because it helps to analyse and understand problems
  • What matters are the understanding you achieve
  • You can choose to see anything as a system, whether or not it really is one

Systems and the Real World

Summary

In this lecture you have learned about:

  • What are the elements of an IS?
  • The role of computer
  • The process of system transformation
  • The general system theory
  • The characteristics of systems
  • The relation between system and the real world